Robert N. Buck (1914–2007)
Author of Weather Flying
About the Author
Captain Robert N. Buck retired from TWA after 37 years, beginning with the Douglas DC-2 and ending with the Boeing 747. He served as TWA's chief pilot, was director of thunderstorm research, and flew over 2000 Atlantic crossings. During World War II he was engaged in weather research for the U.S. show more Air Corps, flying a B-17 and a Black Widow P-61; for this he was awarded, as a civilian, the Air Medal by President Harry Truman. In 1930, at age 16, he flew alone across the United States, breaking the junior transcontinental speed record. More recently, buck has been an air safety consultant to the FAA and various airlines and has worked with the International Civil Aviation Organization--the UN part of aviation--to develop a new plan of world airspace. show less
Image credit: Courtesy of Richard Arthur Norton, Wikimedia Commons
Works by Robert N. Buck
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Buck, Robert Nietzel
- Birthdate
- 1914-01-29
- Date of death
- 2007-04-14
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- aviator
pilot - Organizations
- TWA
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Elizabeth, New Jersey, USA
- Place of death
- Berlin, Vermont, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
I think this book is very useful and informative for all types of pilots (VFR and IFR), but it was just really long. It was hard to get through. I know it's not a novel where you kick back in front of the fireplace with a glass of wine and just enjoy it. But to be useful, you have to read it, and to want to read it, it has to be at least somewhat compelling or otherwise interesting. I furthermore didn't understand the logic of the organization of the chapters, which contributed to the show more difficulty I had in getting through this book.
That said, if you can tough it out, there's a lot of useful information packed in between these two covers. I'll probably revisit this book when I get my instrument rating. show less
That said, if you can tough it out, there's a lot of useful information packed in between these two covers. I'll probably revisit this book when I get my instrument rating. show less
Weather Flying is regarded in the industry as the bible of weather flying. Robert Buck, a general aviation and commercial pilot with tens of thousands of hours of flight time, explains weather in a nontechnical way, giving pilots useful understanding of weather and practical knowledge of how to judge it and fly it. Covers weather flying psychology, en route weather changes, radar and how to use it, taking off in bad weather, and much more. Winner of the Flight Safety Foundation's Publication show more Award; recommended by the FAA.
Captain Robert N. Buck retired from TWA after having flown well over two thousand Atlantic crossings and thirty-seven years of service as chief pilot and director of thunderstorm research. During World War II he was engaged in weather research for the U.S. Air Corps, for which he was awarded, as a civilian, the Air Medal by President Harry Truman. More recently, Buck has worked with the International Civil Aviation Organization -- the UN's body for aviation -- to develop a new plan of world airspace. show less
Captain Robert N. Buck retired from TWA after having flown well over two thousand Atlantic crossings and thirty-seven years of service as chief pilot and director of thunderstorm research. During World War II he was engaged in weather research for the U.S. Air Corps, for which he was awarded, as a civilian, the Air Medal by President Harry Truman. More recently, Buck has worked with the International Civil Aviation Organization -- the UN's body for aviation -- to develop a new plan of world airspace. show less
Weather Flying is regarded in the industry as the bible of weather flying. Robert Buck, a general aviation and commercial pilot with tens of thousands of hours of flight time, explains weather in a nontechnical way, giving pilots useful understanding of weather and practical knowledge of how to judge it and fly it. Covers weather flying psychology, en route weather changes, radar and how to use it, taking off in bad weather, and much more. Winner of the Flight Safety Foundation's Publication show more Award; recommended by the FAA.
Captain Robert N. Buck retired from TWA after having flown well over two thousand Atlantic crossings and thirty-seven years of service as chief pilot and director of thunderstorm research. During World War II he was engaged in weather research for the U.S. Air Corps, for which he was awarded, as a civilian, the Air Medal by President Harry Truman. More recently, Buck has worked with the International Civil Aviation Organization -- the UN's body for aviation -- to develop a new plan of world airspace. show less
Captain Robert N. Buck retired from TWA after having flown well over two thousand Atlantic crossings and thirty-seven years of service as chief pilot and director of thunderstorm research. During World War II he was engaged in weather research for the U.S. Air Corps, for which he was awarded, as a civilian, the Air Medal by President Harry Truman. More recently, Buck has worked with the International Civil Aviation Organization -- the UN's body for aviation -- to develop a new plan of world airspace. show less
Lists
McGraw-Hill (1)
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Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Members
- 223
- Popularity
- #100,549
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 17













