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Switching from MCC Pilot Log or CrewLounge PilotLog to Wingman: complete migration guide
Pilots who chose MCC Pilot Log or CrewLounge PilotLog had good reasons at the time. Both apps have been around long enough to build genuine user bases, both handle the core job of recording flight time, and both have served pilots through multiple career stages. None of that changes because a different option exists. What does change, for a growing number of pilots, is what the logbook needs to do. Roster integration, multi-device sync, and clean alignment with DGCA and eGCA

Vinay Raibole
5 days ago8 min read


When pilot logbook apps shut down: how to protect your career data
A logbook is one of the few records a pilot carries across an entire career. It outlasts type ratings, base changes, and even the airline you happen to fly for this year. So when the app holding that record changes form or stops being maintained, the question stops being academic. The most visible recent example is mccPILOTLOG, which transitioned to CrewLounge, an Aerosoft-owned platform, with the original mccPILOTLOG brand effectively wound down. Pilots who relied on it were

Vinay Raibole
May 307 min read


How to choose a pilot logbook in 2026: a buyer's framework
Most logbook comparisons hand you a ranking and tell you which app sits at the top. That approach assumes every pilot flies the same way, under the same regulator, with the same devices, at the same point in their career. None of that is true. A logbook is the one piece of software you will carry across an entire flying career. It will be audited, presented at airline interviews, submitted to regulators for licence conversions, and checked for currency before a line check. Th

Vinay Raibole
May 229 min read
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