Save time with a new aviation keyboard for ForeFlight

2 min read

As pilots transition to a paperless cockpit, the scratch pad is usually the last to go. Sometimes, you just can’t beat a pen and paper for copying ATIS, clearances, and taxi instructions. A new add-on aims to change that, by making ForeFlight’s ScratchPads faster and easier to use.

FFKeyboard is found in the App Store, but it’s really a third-party keyboard, not a standalone app. While adding another keyboard to your iPad may sound weird, Apple has allowed it since iOS 8 was released in 2014. Since then, thousands of options have been released, and most of them improve speed or add new functions. In the case of FFKeyboard, you can now access aviation-specific phrases right in ForeFlight.

To install it, first download FFKeyboard from the App Store. Then go to the main Settings app on your iPad, General, Keyboard, then tap on Keyboards at the top of the screen. From there, tap Add New Keyboard and select FFKeyboard.

Next, open ForeFlight and go to the More tab and the Settings page. Make sure you have “Extra Keyboard Keys” turned on.

From there, you’re all set. Go to the ScratchPads tab and create a new one, specifically a Type ScratchPad. Now, when you go to type, you’ll have the option of using your regular QWERTY keyboard (the default) or the FFKeyboard (tap the globe symbol in the bottom left corner of the keyboard to access this). If you don’t see the globe symbol, you might need to disable another third-party keyboard – we had this issue on one iPad that already had a third-party keyboard installed.

White keys across the top show the main sections, including ATIS, CLR DEL, and TAXI. Each of these pages has context-specific abbreviations and contractions, like the phonetic alphabet, common clearance phrases and communications instructions.

The FFKeyboard is helpful in all phases of flight, but particularly at the beginning. We used it to copy down ATIS quickly (only took one time!), as well as our IFR clearance, and taxi instructions. When you’re finished, just tap HIDE KB and it will disappear, revealing the familiar ForeFlight tab bar.

FFKeyboard is available for $2.99 in the iTunes App Store.

8 replies
  1. Sam Staton
    Sam Staton says:

    There is a serious problem with using this keyboard – it takes over the machine. The only way I can go back to the qwerty keyboard is to go back into settings and delete the new one. Not good!!!!

    • Brmccolley
      Brmccolley says:

      At the bottom of the FFKeyboard is a key labeled KB. This will toggle to the standard keyboard.

  2. Mike Ladd
    Mike Ladd says:

    Sam, tap the KB key for the standard KeyBoard. It’s not as intuitive as I had hoped, but that’s how you change back to the other installed keyboards.

  3. Barry G
    Barry G says:

    Having an off-line glossary for all the functions and keys would be handy. Some of the keys are not as intuitive as one might hope … or I may just be a little slow. 🙂

  4. iPad Guru
    iPad Guru says:

    Once you become familiar with the shortcut keys, this is a great time saver. You still end up with your iPad for off flight browsing.

Trackbacks & Pingbacks

  1. […] this year we reviewed a third-party plug-in app for ForeFlight, called FFKeyboard, that allows you add a custom iPad keyboard to ForeFlight. This allows to save […]

  2. […] Source: Ipad appsSave time with a new aviation keyboard for ForeFlight […]

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