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Aerobatic Flight Log

Specialised flight log for aerobatic pilots — figures flown and more, with live totals and CSV export.

Aerobatic flight under 91.303/91.307 carries its own constraints (airspace, parachute repack cycles); competition pilots additionally log figures and sequences flown per session.

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Total time
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Events, last 12 months
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Lifetime events
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Flights

No entries yet — add your first one above. Data stays in your browser.

⚠️ Not for operational decisions. This is a record-keeping and planning aid only — not certified avionics, not a source of regulatory truth. Always verify against official sources (FAA/EASA/DGCA) and your operator's approved documents before flying.

Free aerobatic flight log built for aerobatic pilots: per-flight records of figures flown, g-range and parachute repack dates, rolling 12-month activity, and CSV exports for operators, insurers and waiver paperwork.

About Aerobatic Flight Log

Aerobatic flight under 91.303/91.307 carries its own constraints (airspace, parachute repack cycles); competition pilots additionally log figures and sequences flown per session. A generic logbook flattens this work into hours; what aerobatic pilots actually need on file is figures flown, g-range and parachute repack dates — the operation-specific details that recency rules, waivers, clubs and underwriters ask about. Each entry here captures those alongside time, the tiles maintain lifetime and rolling 12-month activity (the window most specialty recency runs on), and the export produces the record an operator or FSDO can audit in one pass. The discipline costs thirty seconds per flight and pays out the first time someone official asks.

How to use Aerobatic Flight Log

  1. 1Log each flight with its operation-specific details and event counts.
  2. 2Watch lifetime and 12-month tiles maintain your currency story.
  3. 3Export the CSV for duty rosters, renewals and insurance questions.

Why use Aerobatic Flight Log?

  • Operation-specific fields: figures flown, g-range and parachute repack dates
  • Rolling 12-month activity — the window specialty recency uses
  • Lifetime event counts beside hour totals
  • Audit-ready CSV for operators, clubs, insurers and waivers
  • Browser-private, free, no account

Frequently asked questions

What's special about logging aerobatic flights?+

Three things ride along: the 180-day parachute repack clock under 91.307 (this log tracks the date), the practice-area/waiver context under 91.303, and — for competition and coaching value — which figures you actually flew and at what g-range. Six months later, 'loops, rolls, hammerheads, +4/-1' per session is the difference between a training plan and guesswork.

How is this different from my main logbook?+

Your master logbook stays the legal record; this is the specialty ledger where figures flown get structured columns instead of remarks-field burial. Specialty operations are audited on specialty data — counts, configurations and conditions — and pulling those out of years of mixed entries is exactly the chore this single-purpose log eliminates.

What totals matter most in this kind of flying?+

Event counts over hours: aerobatic pilots are evaluated on documented operations — the 12-month rolling figure this tool headlines — more than on accumulated time. Insurers and operators read recency as competence in specialty work, so a current 12-month number with per-event detail behind it is the strongest record you can present.

Do I need an account or internet connection?+

No account and no connection are needed once the page has loaded — all records are kept in local storage on your device and all calculations run in your browser. The trade-off is that data does not sync between devices, so export the CSV file when you want to move or archive your records.

How do I back up or print these records?+

Use the Export CSV button below the table: it downloads your full operations record as a spreadsheet-ready file. From there you can print a clean copy, archive it with your training folder, or import it into any electronic logbook program. Exporting monthly is a good habit since the working data lives only in your browser.

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