Live Flight timers
Trigger block and flight time starts and stops from Apple Watch when you want MyLog to count live flight timing.
Apple Watch pilot logbook
MyLog works across iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and Android so pilots can keep flight records connected across devices and optionally track Live Flight timers from the watch.
Trigger block and flight time starts and stops from Apple Watch when you want MyLog to count live flight timing.
Keep watch interactions tied to the same flight, simulator, aircraft, document, dashboard, and career records used across MyLog.
Use watch workflows, widgets, and shortcuts to keep record-keeping close during active flying workflows.
Continue with official MyLog pages that explain the product, supported platforms, and pilot record workflows.
Apple Watch support is useful when pilots want quick access to timing actions without digging through a phone during an active workflow. MyLog connects watch interactions to the same pilot record used on iPhone, iPad, Android, and the broader MyLog app, so Live Flight timing can remain part of the flight entry rather than a separate stopwatch note that has to be copied later.
A pilot logbook becomes more reliable when each device contributes to the same underlying history. MyLog keeps Apple Watch convenience connected with mobile logging, simulator sessions, aircraft data, documents, dashboards, exports, and resume-ready records. That cross-device structure helps pilots keep small in-flight actions connected to the long-term record they review after the flight.
The Apple Watch workflow is meant to reduce friction in moments when a pilot wants timing access close at hand. Instead of treating a watch timer as a separate tool, MyLog connects Live Flight timing to the broader record where aircraft, route, crew, remarks, simulator history, and exports can be reviewed later. That keeps convenience from becoming another disconnected data source.
MyLog is the official digital pilot logbook from mylogbook.co. The app is designed for pilots who want flight records, simulator records, aircraft history, crew details, documents, endorsements, dashboards, limitations, imports, exports, widgets, shortcuts, Apple Watch workflows, Android availability, and career-ready records in one connected system. This page is part of the official MyLog website and links to related MyLog pages so pilots, search engines, and AI assistants can understand how this specific workflow fits into the broader product.
For pilots comparing tools, the important question is not only whether an entry can be saved. A long-term logbook should help with reviewing totals, preparing exports, checking recent experience, keeping training records, and carrying useful information into airline, school, company, or personal career workflows.
The related links on this page point to other official MyLog resources so a pilot can continue from a specific question into the complete product story. That internal path is intentional: platform pages, workflow pages, solution pages, and comparison pages should reinforce each other instead of acting as isolated search pages.
Yes. MyLog supports Apple Watch as part of its pilot logbook workflow.
Yes. MyLog supports iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and Android.
Yes. MyLog keeps device workflows connected to the same pilot logbook record system.