Instead of questions, a long document appeared: . It was a secret supplement to the question bank, written by the old instructor himself. In it, he confessed that 147 questions in the public bank had no correct answer according to the official CAA textbooks. They were designed to force students to consult real-world operational manuals, NOT the study guides.

"Get the Bristol Question Bank. But never trust it blindly. Your best study aid is your curiosity."

The rumor among students was: "You don't pass the CAA exams. You survive the Bristol Bank."

To this day, ATPL students whisper about the vault and the 147 anomalies. Some say it’s an urban legend. Others — the ones who dig deeper than the question bank — know better.

Here’s an interesting story centered around the ATPL Question Bank Bristol — a real and well-known resource for student pilots training for their Airline Transport Pilot License (ATPL) exams. The Ghost of Bristol

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