A link pops into your email to download the report on your real computer for printing or filing. You can generate tax or time-in-type reports on the iPhone and upload them the company’s website. What makes the app work as a complete logbook solution, however, is built-in reporting. There are also optional business fields for tax purposes. The flight time list is customizable so you can hide duty times if you don’t log it, but add approach types or water landings if they apply. Recording flights is sped by favorite aircraft and airports and quick duplication of times to save retyping the same information repeatedly. For the professional pilot, there’s both time remaining for duty limits and predictive warnings for scheduled flights (downloaded from your airline). Want a special field for currency in tailwheel, full-stop, night landings in that Beech 18? No problem. The heart of LogTen Pro is the Radar page with your total times. The two obviously can synchronize, but it’s not necessary, especially with the big-screen interface of an iPad. What we found impressive was that the iOS apps are almost as burly as the desktop version-better in some ways. LogTen Pro exists both as an iOS logbook and a desktop program for the Mac. Luckily, a few solutions distinguished themselves from the pack. We were shocked how many options there were for logging via an app, either as a standalone solution or paired with desktop versions. It’s simple, cheap and satisfying to use. But digital logbooks automatically back up, total your time for insurance, an 8710 or duty limits, and, if it’s on a mobile device, are always with you. There’s nothing wrong with a paper logbook.
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