This is where stories fly, culture breathes, and humanity connects.
All through the lens of flight.
This isn't just another aviation blog — Dane Aviation is where the runway meets the rhythm of real life. From the cockpit to cobblestone streets, from flight maneuvers to food stalls deep in the heart of forgotten cities, this platform is a living chronicle of one man's journey through the skies and into the soul of the world.
Here, you'll follow my pursuit of flight training — not just as a technical journey, but as a personal renaissance. Every destination becomes a lens into the human experience — revealing vibrant local cultures, misunderstood regions, street food with soul, and stories that rarely make the headlines.
Dane Aviation blends the precision of pilot training with the poetry of the people I meet. One flight at a time.

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From annual inspections to daily preflights — the complete guide to keeping your aircraft airworthy.
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Every camera, lens, and accessory I use to capture stunning footage from the cockpit and beyond.
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From budget options to full cockpit builds — how I set up my home sim and use it for real training value.
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Beyond borders. Beyond aviation. A journey into the skies and the soul of the world.

Dane Aviation isn't just another aviation blog — it's where the runway meets the rhythm of real life. From the cockpit to cobblestone streets, from flight maneuvers to food stalls in the heart of forgotten cities, this platform is a living chronicle of one man's journey through the skies and into the soul of the world.
Here, you'll follow the pursuit of flight training — not just as a technical journey, but as a personal renaissance. Every destination becomes a lens into the human experience — revealing vibrant local cultures, misunderstood regions, street food with soul, hidden shops, and stories that rarely make the headlines.
Dane Aviation blends the precision of pilot training with the poetry of the people met along the way. It's a global odyssey stitched together by raw truth, unexpected beauty, and the quiet power of shared humanity.
Subscribe for flight reports, travel essays, and honest aviation content every week.
One pilot. Every continent. A story told through cockpits, cobblestones, and culture.

Dane Aviation was born from a singular obsession: what happens when you learn to fly — not just the aircraft, but the world itself? This platform is the result of thousands of hours in the cockpit, hundreds of passport stamps, and an unrelenting curiosity about the people and places most travellers fly over rather than through.
The journey began with a simple question: could a student pilot document the entire process of earning a Private Pilot Certificate — honestly, transparently, and with no filters? The answer became a documentary series that evolved into something far larger.
Dane Aviation exists to bridge two worlds that rarely overlap: serious flight training and immersive world travel storytelling. Most aviation content stays inside the airport. Most travel content stays at the hotel pool. This platform blows past both.
Brands and organisations that believe in authentic aviation storytelling.
Dane Aviation accepts sponsorships from brands that align with the values of this platform: authenticity, adventure, and honest storytelling. Every partner is one I personally use, trust, or genuinely believe in. No paid placements for products I wouldn't recommend to a fellow pilot.
Transparency: All sponsor relationships are disclosed in the relevant content. Editorial independence is never compromised.
Supporting pilot training content and flight simulation across all Dane Aviation productions.
Providing professional camera systems, mounts, and accessories used in all cockpit and travel footage.
Aviation safety education resources that every student pilot should know about.
Global travel logistics and ground support for international aviation and adventure trips.
Email platform powering Dane Aviation's weekly subscriber communications.
Post-production, colour grading, and distribution support for the Dane Aviation video catalogue.
If your brand aligns with aviation, adventure, travel, or education and you'd like to explore a partnership, get in touch. All enquiries are reviewed personally and responded to within 5 business days.
Your complete roadmap from zero flight hours to wings on your chest.

Becoming a pilot is one of the most rewarding journeys a person can undertake. It demands discipline, study, and a willingness to embrace failure as a teacher. Here's an honest breakdown of how the system works under FAA regulations.
Note: Requirements vary by country. This guide is based on FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) standards. Always verify with your local aviation authority.
Your very first step. Requires a medical exam and a basic knowledge test. Allows solo flight under instructor supervision. Min age: 16.
40+ hours flight time (20 dual, 10 solo), written test, and a practical checkride. The foundational pilot licence.
Fly in clouds and low visibility. Requires 50 hrs XC PIC time and 40 hrs instrument flight.
Allows paid flying. Requires 250 total hours, complex aircraft training, and a demanding checkride.
The highest certificate. Required to be airline captain. Requires 1,500 total flight hours.
| Certificate | Min Hours | Min Age | Medical |
|---|---|---|---|
| Student Pilot | 0 | 16 | 3rd Class |
| Private Pilot | 40 | 17 | 3rd Class |
| Instrument Rating | 50 XC hrs | — | 3rd Class |
| Commercial Pilot | 250 | 18 | 2nd Class |
| ATP | 1,500 | 23 | 1st Class |
Everything you need to know about earning your PPL — from first lesson to checkride.

The Private Pilot Certificate is the foundation every pilot earns first. It's not the most technically demanding rating, but it sets the standard for everything that follows. Here is my complete first-hand breakdown.
My result: Passed the written with 87% after 6 weeks of ground study. Hardest areas: METARs/TAFs and airspace classification.
Split into a 2–3 hour oral exam and a 1.5–2 hour flight test. Manoeuvres tested include steep turns, slow flight, stalls, ground reference, emergency procedures, cross-country navigation, and landings. Know the ACS document — it is your exact standard.
Flying in the clouds — what it takes and what it teaches you.

The Instrument Rating (IR) transforms a fair-weather pilot into an all-weather aviator. Flying through clouds on instruments alone, operating IFR in the same airspace as the airlines — it's demanding, humbling, and completely worth the effort.
Tip: Up to 10 of the required 40 instrument hours can be logged in an FAA-approved simulator (AATD/BATD). Use this — it's significantly cheaper per hour than the real aircraft.
The licence that lets you earn a living in the sky.

The Commercial Pilot Certificate (CPL) is the licence that legally allows you to be compensated for flying. It demands a significantly higher standard of precision and professionalism than the PPL. Here's what it takes.
| Manoeuvre | PPL Tolerance | CPL Tolerance |
|---|---|---|
| Altitude | ±200 ft | ±100 ft |
| Heading | ±20° | ±10° |
| Airspeed | ±10 kts | ±5 kts |
| Bank (steep turns) | ±10° | ±5° |
The unfiltered journal of my path from zero hours to certificated pilot.
Every lesson. Every failure. Every breakthrough. I've documented this process so aspiring pilots have a realistic picture of what the journey actually looks like — not glossy highlights, but the full truth.
Full transparency: I've failed checkrides. I've had instructors tell me I wasn't ready. I've grounded myself for weather when the macho voice in my head said "go". All of it is here.
| Phase | Hours | Duration | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| PPL Training | 68.4 hrs | 11 months | ✓ PPL Earned |
| Instrument Rating | 52.1 hrs | 8 months | ✓ IR Earned |
| Commercial Training | In Progress | — | Ongoing |
Three solo touch-and-go landings at a towered airport on a calm autumn morning. I called my mother from the ramp.
150 nm, three airports, and a navigation error that added 40 minutes. Best education I ever paid for.
Failed the first attempt on a soft-field takeoff. Retrained three weeks, passed comfortably second time.
First attempt. Months of sim work paid off. The examiner said my ILS approach was "clean".
The honest numbers behind pilot checkrides — and what they mean for you.
Nobody talks about checkride failure rates. Flight schools don't advertise theirs. But the data exists — and understanding it is essential for any aspiring pilot who wants realistic expectations.
| Test Area | Most Common Failure Reason |
|---|---|
| Oral Examination | Weak systems knowledge, can't explain weather products |
| Slow Flight | Airspeed too fast, stall horn triggers unexpectedly |
| Cross-Country Nav | Lost situational awareness, poor fuel planning |
| Landings | Crosswind correction, bounced or floated |
| Emergency Procedures | Forgot checklist steps, poor forced landing site |
I failed my PPL checkride on the first attempt — a soft-field takeoff. The examiner terminated the flight. I went home, trained three more weeks, and passed the second attempt comfortably. The failure was one of the most important experiences of my entire training.
What to expect, how to prepare, and what questions to ask before you commit.

A discovery flight is often the first time a future pilot sits in the left seat. But choosing the right school is one of the most consequential decisions in your aviation journey. Here's how to evaluate properly before signing anything.
Red flag: Any school that can't tell you their checkride pass rate, or waves the question away, is hiding something. Pass rates directly reflect training quality.
Almost every flight school offers an introductory "discovery flight" — typically $150–$250 for roughly one hour where you actually fly the aircraft. Always do one before committing. Pay attention to the instructor: Are they patient? Do they explain the why behind every action, or just demonstrate?
The student-instructor relationship is everything in flight training. If the chemistry feels wrong on the discovery flight, trust that instinct.
Aircraft rental rates explained — and why the difference matters more than you think.

One of the first confusing terms you'll encounter when shopping for flight training or aircraft rental is the distinction between "wet" and "dry" rates. The concept is simple, but the financial impact is significant.
| Wet Rate | Dry Rate | |
|---|---|---|
| Fuel included? | Yes | No |
| Oil included? | Yes | No |
| Who pays fuel? | Flight school / owner | The renter / pilot |
| Typical C172 rate | $160–$220/hr | $110–$150/hr |
| Cost predictability | High — fixed per hour | Variable — fuel prices fluctuate |
| Best for… | Students and occasional renters | High-volume pilots and clubs |
For student pilots, wet rates are almost always preferable. The simplicity of knowing your exact hourly cost makes budgeting far easier. When you're already managing airspace, checklists, weather, and radio calls, the last thing you need is fuel cost uncertainty on top of everything else.
Pro tip: Always ask whether a rate is Hobbs or Tach time. Hobbs runs whenever the engine is running. Tach time runs slower at lower RPM. The difference can be 10–15% on training flights with lots of pattern work.
Glass cockpits vs. steam gauges — an honest pilot's perspective.

The debate between glass cockpits (like the Garmin G1000) and traditional "steam gauge" analogue instruments has been going for two decades. As someone who trained on both, I have a clear opinion — and it might not be what you expect.
| Glass (G1000) | Steam Gauges | |
|---|---|---|
| Information density | Very high | Moderate |
| Learning curve | Steep initially | Gentler |
| Situational awareness | Excellent (when mastered) | Good |
| Failure modes | Single point of failure risk | Distributed failure risk |
| Rental cost | Higher | Lower |
Train on steam gauges first. Students who train exclusively on glass often develop a dangerous dependency on the moving map. When the G1000 acts up — and it does — they're lost. Steam gauge pilots have a fallback hardwired into their scan from day one.
Articles, guides, and adventures from the world of aviation and travel.

From annual inspections to daily preflights, the complete guide to keeping your aircraft airworthy.
Read More →
The exact cameras, lenses, gimbals, and accessories I use to capture cockpit and travel footage.
Read More →
My full workflow from recording in the cockpit to final export — software, settings, and techniques.
Read More →
From budget options to full cockpit builds — how I set up my home sim for real training value.
Read More →
What to expect, what to bring, and what to ask before committing to any flight training school.
Read More →
An honest look at checkride failure rates — and what you can do to beat the averages.
Read More →Subscribe to get the latest articles, trip reports, and aviation insights every week.
What every pilot needs to know about keeping aircraft airworthy.

Most student pilots focus entirely on learning to fly. Fewer take time to understand what keeps the aircraft airworthy between flights. An informed pilot is a better preflight inspector, a more credible renter, and a far more confident aviator.
Memory tip: AVIATES — Annual, VOR, 100-hour, Airworthiness Directives, Transponder, ELT, Static system. These are the 7 maintenance currency items tested on your written exam and required in real life.
As pilot in command, you are legally responsible for the airworthiness of the aircraft before every flight. The preflight is your opportunity to catch what the last pilot missed. Use the checklist. Every time. Even in the aircraft you've flown a hundred times.
Every piece of gear I use to film aviation and travel content — no fluff, no padding.

The gear matters far less than the eye behind it. But since you're asking — here's everything I actually use, why I chose it, and what I'd change if starting from scratch today.
Philosophy: Every piece of kit earns its place or it doesn't fly. Aviation cinematography has unique constraints — weight, vibration, cockpit space, and loose-object regulations.
Outstanding low-light performance. 4K 120fps slow motion for approach and landing sequences. The workhorse.
Compact, lightweight, and affordable. Excellent for handheld travel footage where the A7S III is too conspicuous.
Suction mounted to the windshield. HyperSmooth stabilisation makes cockpit footage usable without a gimbal.
Sub-250g for easier airspace authorisation. 4K/60fps. Fits in a jacket pocket — the ideal travel drone.
The go-to for cockpit interiors and tight travel spaces.
Single focal length discipline. Exceptional sharpness at a fraction of Sony's price.
Three-axis stabilisation for ground-based travel footage and walking shots.
Dual lavalier system for interviews, narration, and ATC-adjacent commentary.
My complete video production workflow — from preflight to final export.

Aviation cinematography has constraints normal filmmaking doesn't. You can't ask the aircraft to do another take. The light changes in seconds at altitude and you're managing the aircraft simultaneously. Here's how I handle all of it.
I build a shot list before I ever get to the airport. Cockpit interior, takeoff, climb, cruise, approach, landing, ramp. Each sequence has a designated camera position planned in advance.
All cameras charged, cards formatted, and settings locked the night before. Nothing is left to figure out in the aircraft.
| Situation | Resolution | Frame Rate | Shutter |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard cockpit / landscape | 4K | 24fps | 1/50s |
| Slow motion (landing, props) | 4K | 120fps | 1/240s |
| Low-light (dawn / dusk) | 4K | 24fps | 1/50s + ISO push |
All footage imported into DaVinci Resolve and backed up to two drives before any editing starts.
Build the story spine first — narrative, pacing, emotional arc. Music goes in here. B-roll fills in later.
All footage shot in S-Log3. Grades applied in DaVinci Resolve — LUT first, then curves and qualifiers.
YouTube: H.265, 4K UHD, 50–80 Mbps. Always export a ProRes master before the delivery file.
How I built my home sim — and how I use it to stay sharp between real flights.

Done right, a home simulator supplements real flight hours, keeps your instrument scan sharp, and lets you practise emergencies without any actual risk. Here's my full build and exactly how I use it.
The most realistic visual environment available for home simulation. Live weather and photogrammetry scenery.
Best value home sim hardware available. Tactile switches, realistic forces, solid build quality.
Smooth differential braking and realistic rudder feel. Essential for crosswind landing practice.
A physical Garmin G1000 replica. Transforms instrument currency training into something genuinely useful.
Wide enough field of view for realistic VFR flying without a multi-monitor setup.
Used with MSFS ATC audio for radio communication practice.
Important: Simulator time in an FAA-approved AATD or BATD can count toward instrument rating requirements. A desktop gaming setup does not qualify — but it is enormously valuable for building procedure memory.
A Logitech Flight Yoke System ($200) plus Microsoft Flight Simulator ($60) on a mid-range PC is genuinely useful for procedure familiarity. Start there, upgrade as your training progresses.
Pilot gear, apparel, and accessories for aviation enthusiasts and travellers.






Browse the complete Dane Aviation collection at the official shop.
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Start by doing what's necessary, then do what's possible — and suddenly you're doing the impossible. Reach out and let's talk about how Dane Aviation can help you.
Thank you for reaching out. I'll get back to you within 5 business days.
How Dane Aviation collects, uses, and protects your information.
Last updated: March 2026
Dane Aviation collects information you voluntarily provide when you contact us, subscribe to our newsletter, or interact with our website. This may include your name, email address, and the content of your messages. We also collect standard analytics data (page views, device type, browser) through anonymised tools.
Dane Aviation does not sell, trade, or rent your personal information to third parties. We may share data with trusted service providers (email platforms, payment processors) strictly for the purposes listed above, under confidentiality agreements.
This website uses minimal cookies for analytics and functionality. No advertising cookies are used. You can disable cookies in your browser settings, though some features may not function correctly.
We retain your personal data only as long as necessary to fulfil the purpose for which it was collected, or as required by law. You may request deletion of your data at any time by emailing info@daneaviation.com.
Depending on your jurisdiction, you may have the right to access, correct, or delete your personal data. To exercise any of these rights, contact us at info@daneaviation.com.
Questions about this policy? Email info@daneaviation.com
The terms that govern your use of the Dane Aviation website and content.
Last updated: March 2026
By accessing or using the Dane Aviation website, you agree to be bound by these Terms of Use. If you do not agree with any part of these terms, please do not use this website.
All content on this website — including text, photography, video, graphics, and the Dane Aviation name and logo — is the intellectual property of Dane Aviation unless otherwise stated. You may not reproduce, distribute, or create derivative works without express written permission.
Aviation regulations and requirements change frequently. While every effort is made to keep training and regulatory information accurate, you should always verify current requirements with the FAA or your local aviation authority before making training decisions. Dane Aviation accepts no liability for decisions made based solely on content published here.
This website contains links to external sites. Dane Aviation is not responsible for the content, accuracy, or privacy practices of any external website. Links do not constitute endorsement.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, Dane Aviation shall not be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, or consequential damages arising from your use of this website or any content published on it.
These terms may be updated from time to time. Continued use of the website after changes are posted constitutes acceptance of the revised terms.
Questions about these terms? Email info@daneaviation.com