Pilots will reference many instruments throughout their flight. Attitude indicators, speed, altimeters, vertical speed indicators, turn indicators, navigation displays, flight management systems and many engine instruments that display temperature, rpm, various pressures such as oil, manifold and hydraulic. The most important instrument is probably their fuel gauge.
Pilots use mostly electronic equipment. If electronics go out they use instruments.
GPS
pilots navigated using magnetic compasses, airspeed instruments, and direction-finding gyros. Radio beacons that enabled pilots to plot their position relative to intercepted radio signals came into use in the late 1920s.
radar
No... pilots will not allow the use of any unessecary electronic devices during flight as it will interfere with the flight instruments
To orient themselves in flight, pilots either: 1. Use visual cues outside the cockpit to keep the airplane stable and on track or 2. (more used) use instruments inside the cockpit that act as visual cues (attitude indicator, speed indicator, altimeter, and GPS)
there isn't any
the pilots need to be able to correctly read the instruments and most of them are color coded
no o
Yep.
pilots use barometers because they don't want to crash because of the air pressure might be high
usually there ears