Do airline pilots give a takeoff briefing before every takeoff? Im sure its in their checklist, and more extensive than a takeoff brief we would do in GA. Can anyone confirm this and how its done?
Yes, every takeoff. The items to be briefed are listed in our manual.Do airline pilots give a takeoff briefing before every takeoff? Im sure its in their checklist, and more extensive than a takeoff brief we would do in GA. Can anyone confirm this and how its done?
Do airline pilots give a takeoff briefing before every takeoff? Im sure its in their checklist, and more extensive than a takeoff brief we would do in GA. Can anyone confirm this and how its done?
GA has to do a brief?
A briefing is done before we push back on every leg. The CA can choose to do the brief regardless of who is flying, but that never happens - the PF is the one that does the brief. Personally, I think we brief waaaay too much crap, but they're the ones signing my paycheck, so I do as I'm told.
Ditto, on all counts......
Because it is seemingly impossible to make the TO warning horn a different sound than the cabin altitude warning horn in the 737, we are required to brief the cabin alt. warning horn memory items before every leg. So, if we get the horn at 1500' agl, we are required to don o2 masks..... Gotta love the FAA!
Ditto, on all counts......
Because it is seemingly impossible to make the TO warning horn a different sound than the cabin altitude warning horn in the 737, we are required to brief the cabin alt. warning horn memory items before every leg. So, if we get the horn at 1500' agl, we are required to don o2 masks..... Gotta love the FAA!
91.107
A briefing is done before we push back on every leg. The CA can choose to do the brief regardless of who is flying, but that never happens - the PF is the one that does the brief. Personally, I think we brief waaaay too much crap, but they're the ones signing my paycheck, so I do as I'm told.
My guess is that it is up to the captain. Obviously they have to do one but how long and what to include seems to vary by pilot and companyLooks as though different airlines do it differently. There is no one exact answer to your question.
My guess is that it is up to the captain. Obviously they have to do one but how long and what to include seems to vary by pilot and company
Geez, man, you gotta use some common sense. Yes, it would be the cabin altitude horn, but do you really think you are going to get that below 10,000 feet? Not likely. And if you do, wouldn't common sense dictate that O2 was not necessary at 1500 AGL unless you were in the mountains somewhere?
I know of 135 and 121 operators flying single-pilot ops, and even they do briefings in a required format. Helps build habits for the folks moving up to bigger planes, and makes writing the manuals easier too.
GA has to do a brief?
My guess is that it is up to the captain. Obviously they have to do one but how long and what to include seems to vary by pilot and company
Yup.. Ours is specific per the manual. I do agree kayho about slight deviations.Our manual is pretty specific in what it needs to include. The order in which items are briefed changes a bit from pilot to pilot, but as long as everything in the manual is hit, nobody seems to mind. We're all great at briefing exactly to the book when in the sim or when a check airman is on the jumpseat, but otherwise you'll see some variation depending on the pilot. Not much, but some.
Oh boy!One of the least standard I've heard: "You stay on your side of the flight attendant, and don't touch my d**k. Okay, let's go."
Oh boy!
All our 747 flights have mission brief an hour before engine start, mission crew safety brief right after door closing on the lower deck, and flight crew brief split between before-engine-start and at the hold short line. Typically, there is a long time-critical taxi, hence the split. Part 91, public aircraft.
Geez, man, you gotta use some common sense. Yes, it would be the cabin altitude horn, but do you really think you are going to get that below 10,000 feet? Not likely. And if you do, wouldn't common sense dictate that O2 was not necessary at 1500 AGL unless you were in the mountains somewhere?
Sure that was the FAA? Sounds like a company procedure to answer a Boeing procedure.
Speaking of. Why do some airline pilots feel the need to mash on the breaks right after touchdown? Is it part of a LAHSO procedure? Do they just want to get off at the first exit? Autobrakes?Oh yeah, there are some good ones out there. One of the better approach briefings I've heard: "This is going to be a hard landing, followed by jerky, uneven deceleration. Any questions?"
I am not allowed to use common sense.
The TO warning horn is the exact same horn as the cabin altitude warning horn. When Billy B. designed the airplane, I guess it was assumed that the crew operating it would be aware enough to understand that a blaring horn at 5000 msl was not a cabin altitude issue, but the new FAA can't see that logic.
It was our POI that mandated it, according to the instructors at the puzzle palace. Don't know or care what the origin is, to be truthful, because, regardless, it doesn't change the fact that it's a required briefing item.....
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Speaking of. Why do some airline pilots feel the need to mash on the breaks right after touchdown? Is it part of a LAHSO procedure? Do they just want to get off at the first exit? Autobrakes?
So it's not necessarily the pilots, it's the autobrakes?Most use autobrakes.
So it's not necessarily the pilots, it's the autobrakes?
From once being on the other side of the fence and knowing the procedures, I seriously doubt it was mandated by the POI.
I see. Thanks for the explanation!Many airlines want the autobrakes armed for every landing. On the Airbus you have "Low" and "Medium", and "Max". Max is armed for TO in case of a rejected TO. Low and Medium are used for landing. The FCOM gives conditions for use in various conditions.
Our company wants autobrakes armed for every landing. Low will give a nice even braking while Medium will hurl you against the shoulder straps.
My technique on a long runway is soon as touchdown I tap the brakes and release the autobrakes then just do it manually.