CISflight E-Book - HOWTO

An AIP is build from hundreds of pages ordered as follows:

GEN general information
ENR enroute rules and charts
SUP supplements
AD aerodromes

Our AIP E-Books are following this structure and conatin all available pages of the original printed editons. This results easily in much over thousand pages for a single country - the integrated VFR/IFR edition for France has even about 6,000 pages.

How is it possible to find the approach charts you need in such a book?

This is easy:

We made our E-Books so that they do not only consist of all original AIP pages. They also contain a detailed table of contents that can be displayed by Adobe Reader, Apple Preview and many other good PDF presentation software (including many E-Book readers) according to PDF specifications.

The CISflight E-Book table of contents is always structured as follows:

AIP   here you find the AIP in its common structure as described above
  GEN general information
  ENR enroute rules and charts
  AD aerodromes (description and approach charts), alphabetically ordered
  AD_3/HEL heliports (description and approach charts), alphabetically ordered
Airports   a list of all airports, ordered by name of the field (if known) - linked directly to the first related document in the AD part
Heliports   a list of all heliports, ordered by name of the field (if known) - linked directly to the first related document in the AD_3 part
Cities  

a list of all airports and heliports, ordered by name of the cities (if known) - linked directly to the first related document in the AD and AD_3 part

IATA   an alphabetically ordered list of all known IATA Codes - linked directly to the first related document in the AD and AD_3 part
ICAO   an alphabetically ordered list of all known ICAO Codes - linked directly to the first related document in the AD and AD_3 part

You do not have to scroll through the whole AIP E-Book to find the data you need.
Instead if you're looking for approach charts of a specific aerodrome, just open the table of contents, select the topic "Airports" and select the field of your choice. You'll directly be forwarded to the correct page. If you know the IATA or ICAO code, just choose the corresponding area of the table of contents and you'll be directly at the pages you need.