In the world of serious flight simulation, the Navigraph AIRAC cycle is the bible. It keeps your FMC, GPS, and moving maps in sync with real-world procedures. Every 28 days, a new cycle drops (e.g., 2410 for October 2024).
Known in underground forums as the “Cheat Cycle,” 1708 has become the unofficial gold standard for simmers who refuse to pay a subscription. But what makes it special? Is it legal? And should you use it? Cycle 1708 was released by Navigraph in August 2017 . It contains valid real-world procedures (SIDs, STARs, approaches, waypoints, and airways) from that period. -FS9 FSX P3D X-Plane- Navigraph AIRAC Cycle 1708 Cheat
Happy (and legal) flying. Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes regarding flight simulation history. The author does not condone software piracy. In the world of serious flight simulation, the
Modern alternatives exist: Navigraph offers a that can install only the cycles your sim needs, and they still support FSX and P3Dv3 (though not FS9). Conclusion: Is the 1708 Cheat Worth It? | For FS9 only (no online flying) | Maybe – it’s your only option | |--------------------------------|-------------------------------| | For FSX/P3Dv3 offline flying | Risky but functional | | For VATSIM/IVAO or modern simming | Absolutely not – use current data | Known in underground forums as the “Cheat Cycle,”
The 1708 AIRAC cycle is a museum piece—a frozen snapshot of the skies from seven years ago. While it keeps legacy simulators alive, it’s not a “cheat” that benefits the hobby. If you can afford it, support Navigraph. If you can’t, consider using the with free, community-updated airport charts rather than pirated data.
But for users of —specifically Microsoft Flight Simulator 2004 (FS9), FSX, Prepar3D (v1-3), and even legacy versions of X-Plane 11—a legend persists: AIRAC Cycle 1708 .