From booking to logbook to billing
A flight school is an operation with tight feedback loops: book the aircraft and the instructor, fly the lesson, log it, track the student's progress, settle the invoice, repeat. AirMan connects that loop end to end. Students and instructors book against live availability, flights are logged with the route and — when ARX9 and AirStream are connected — telemetry and video, and usage rolls straight into student and school billing.
Lesson replay and early-solo supervision
Training improves fastest when the debrief is based on what actually happened, not on memory. With AirStream, students can replay a lesson with video, position and telemetry, and compare instructor feedback against the real flight path. Instructors can review student decisions after landing, monitor early solo flights and keep visibility on newly certified pilots as they build experience.
AirStream is not a certified accident recorder and is not a substitute for mandated equipment, official procedures, pilot judgement or regulatory safety systems. Availability of video and telemetry depends on connectivity, hardware, configuration and plan.
Ratings, medicals and currency
Schools live and die by documentation. AirMan tracks student and instructor licences, ratings, medicals and currency, and surfaces what is expiring or missing before it disrupts the schedule or grounds an instructor mid-syllabus.
Instructors and aircraft, scheduled together
Instructor availability, aircraft availability and student readiness rarely line up by accident. AirMan brings them into one view, so the front desk can book the right instructor on the right aircraft for the right stage of training — and keep the fleet flying.
One ecosystem as you grow
AirMan is modular and connected. Add AirStream for lesson replay and supervision, and ARX9 to bring flight data in automatically rather than by manual upload. If your school also flies gliders and runs contests, AirRace adds race intelligence on the same data layer.