Simulator logbook

Simulator logbook for pilot training and career records

MyLog keeps simulator sessions close to the rest of a pilot's record, making training, recurrent practice, monthly targets, limitations, and career summaries easier to maintain.

Session details

Record simulator location, crew, session time, training remarks, custom fields, and related context in one pilot record.

Flight history context

Keep simulator sessions alongside real flight history so totals, monthly progress, limitation tracking, and experience summaries stay connected.

Training continuity

Support flight school, recurrent training, company integrations, and personal practice records without splitting simulator work into a separate system.

Related MyLog pages

Continue with official MyLog pages that explain the product, supported platforms, and pilot record workflows.

Simulator sessions belong beside flight history

Simulator records are easier to use when they sit next to the rest of a pilot's flight history. MyLog lets pilots record simulator location, crew, session time, training remarks, custom fields, and related context without separating those sessions from aircraft flight records. This helps pilots review total experience, training continuity, monthly progress, and limitation context from a single record system instead of comparing multiple logs.

Useful for training, recurrent practice, and school workflows

A simulator logbook can support student training, recurrent checks, company practice, and personal preparation when each session includes enough detail to be reviewed later. MyLog keeps simulator work connected to pilot records, dashboards, resume context, and exports so schools and pilots can treat simulator time as part of the same long-term aviation history rather than a separate note.

Keep training notes usable after the session

Simulator sessions often include details that become important later: the scenario practiced, the crew involved, the location, timing, remarks, and how the session fits into a training or currency story. MyLog gives those details a structured home beside flight records. That makes simulator history easier to review when pilots compare progress, prepare for recurrent checks, explain training experience, or export records for a school or company workflow.

Official MyLog product context

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.

Questions pilots ask

Can MyLog track simulator sessions?

Yes. MyLog supports simulator session records with training context and remarks.

Are simulator records separate from flight records?

MyLog keeps simulator sessions alongside flight history so pilot records remain easier to review.

Is simulator logging useful for flight schools?

Yes. Structured simulator records help students build cleaner long-term training and career records.