Seems like I am among the last to ritually order my paper charts every April
For the OP, given you will fly rapidly across France, you can buy a 1/1 000 000 one (I know Cartabossy, Air Million) but an EFB app should be enough.
What I would not skip is checking AIP SUP and corresponding Notams. It can show significant changes that won’t be on the chart or in the EFB. On my last flight, I woke up early to do that and I was glad because I discovered 2 MIL training areas beginning that same day.
PROB90 you will fly without issues, but still YMMV.
Myself, I reverted back from SD to paper chart and manual check of AIP & notams. For my local-only flying, it works well.
Jujupilote wrote:
Seems like I am among the last to ritually order my paper charts every April
We buy one set of the 8 german paper charts, to hang it on the wall in the classroom
Best paper VFR Chart for planning (IT/SI/HR)
What’s the best paper VFR chart for planning for the area of ITaly/Slovenia/Croatia? Enroute!
AirMillion?
Rogersdata?
Any other vendors?
Thanks!
Free VFR charts for Europe may be relevant.
Also see “Threads possibly related to this one” below.
I’ve been watching this situation since 2000 and some trends are obvious. A lot of it is “cultural” e.g. bits of French airspace, as depicted on their VFR charts, are undecipherable, but their ATC clears you through (except for R and P areas) while UK charts are almost never unclear but UK ATC often doesn’t clear you and if you go in you get busted aggressively nowadays. And countries with little or no GA, or little GA “going distances”, (most of Europe) tend to have pretty useless charts because nobody uses them anyway.
France has those mentioned. I don’t think Spain ever had any usable Spanish ones. I tended to use the Jepp ones but they stopped in 2013.
Not sure there are any good ones for those places.
I bought Air Million charts when I planned cross-border trips in 2019. I liked them.
That said, I am not sure one can compare scientifically charts. It’s quite subjective IMO.
Identical threads merged.
I think the best use of VFR charts nowadays is for a quick and dirty reference, or for presentations. And then fly with a current satnav app.
I have the CAA 1:500k chart on the wall in my “home office”
but the half life of my license would be measured in hours if not minutes if I actually flew with it. I would need to fly non-transponder, like 50% of UK GA
I did a bit of a tidy-up of the VFR chart groups
I think the paper ones should go into the “vintage” section of EuroGA (there isn’t one)