Atpl Questions Database [patched] -

Written by Rick Founds
Links to contributors: Rick Founds

This has been one of my favorite songs for years. I contacted Rick back in 2002 about collaborating, partly because I had sung this song so many times. The recording is from Rick's Praise Classics 2 CD. - Elton, September 12, 2009



Lyrics

Lord, I lift Your name on high.
Lord, I love to sing Your praises.
I'm so glad You're in my life;
I'm so glad You came to save us.

You came from Heaven to earth
To show the way.
From the Earth to the cross,
My debt to pay.
From the cross to the grave,
From the grave to the sky;
Lord, I lift Your name on high.

Lord, I lift Your name on high.
Lord, I love to sing Your praises.
I'm so glad You're in my life;
I'm so glad You came to save us.

You came from Heaven to earth
To show the way.
From the Earth to the cross,
My debt to pay.
From the cross to the grave,
From the grave to the sky;
Lord, I lift Your name on high.

You came from Heaven to earth
To show the way.
From the Earth to the cross,
My debt to pay.
From the cross to the grave,
From the grave to the sky;
Lord, I lift Your name on high.

You came from Heaven to earth
To show the way.
From the Earth to the cross,
My debt to pay.
From the cross to the grave,
From the grave to the sky;
Lord, I lift Your name on high.



Copyright © 1989 Maranatha Praise, Inc (used by permission)

To the outsider, it is simply a bank of multiple-choice questions. To the student pilot, it is both a security blanket and a formidable opponent. But what exactly is this database, why does it provoke such strong emotions, and how should you truly use it to pass your exams on the first try? In technical terms, the database is a proprietary collection of every possible question, answer, and distractor (the incorrect options) that can appear on the 14 EASA or 12 FAA ATPL theoretical knowledge exams. These aren't random trivia; they are scenario-based problems designed to test the 14 learning objectives defined by international aviation authorities.

For any aspiring airline pilot, the journey to the Frozen ATPL (Airline Transport Pilot License) is less a gentle glide and more a high-G climb through a thunderstorm of regulations, aerodynamics, and meteorology. At the center of this grueling challenge lies a single, powerful, and often misunderstood tool: the ATPL Questions Database.

When you get a question wrong, do not simply note the correct letter. Open the PDF, read the paragraph, watch a YouTube video on the concept, or draw the diagram. Bad student: "The answer to question #4472 is 'Coriolis Effect.' Next." Good student: "I got #4472 wrong because I confused precession with Coriolis. Let me spend 10 minutes understanding how a laser gyro works." A Note on Legality and Integrity The ATPL is the PhD of aviation. Cutting corners via "dump sheets" or illegally obtained exam dumps (actual screenshots from real test centers) is a career-ending move. Not only is it unethical, but aviation authorities now use statistical analysis to identify cheating. If you pass using illegal dumps, you will have the license but not the knowledge. That will kill you—or your passengers—in a real emergency. Conclusion The ATPL questions database is the finest flight simulation for your brain. It is a pressure chamber, a mirror, and a tutor all in one. Respect it, drill it, but never worship it.