Position - Where am I, and what's happening next? Kick-start situational awareness.
ATIS(/AWOS/whatever weather)
Instruments - set altimeter, set DG to compass
Nav radios - Set up everything possible. Nav1, Nav2, GPS, DME, ADF.
Com radios - Ready tower/CTAF in com1 standby or com2
Approach briefing - Altitudes, headings, everything else on the plate.
Landing checklist - GUMPSS
Listen for your approach clearance.
My $.02I think this may have been asked before, but I wonder what you guys use by way of acronyms to prepare and fly an approach?
My $.02
I use this one for every instance of flying
DUUATS
Don't
Use
Useless
Acronyms
They
Suck
Or MAPS
Mnemonics
Are
Pretty
Stupid
I got that way after some CFI tried to tell me some 14 character (or something like that) mnemonic for remembering all the required equipment for VFR and IFR flight.
By the time you had the mnemonic remembered you also had the all the equipment memorized an no longer needed the mnemonic.
If I recall, it's A = Airport (correct approach plate, revision dates, runway, etc.), P = review Profile view, P = review Plan view, R = Radios, O = Obstacles (MSA, towers, hills, etc.), A = Altitudes (initial, step downs, MDA/MA), C = Course (final approach), H = missed and Holding instructions
Not only that, it leaves you with a false sense of what is required.TOMATO FLAMES!!!
You're right, that one is particularly useless because you can just look it up in the FAR/AIM. However, many in-flight ones work very well.
What's it say in Section 6?Tell me, is the stall warning horn required?
Yeah that is the oneTOMATO FLAMES!!!
yepYou're right, that one is particularly useless because you can just look it up in the FAR/AIM. However, many in-flight ones work very well.
Nope. The time wasted remembering the acronym could have been used to just memorize the list. Beside the whole idea of using the acronym is to avoid memorizing the list.Well I guess it worked then.
My favorite pre-approach acronym is:
D O N T D I E
So far, so good.
damn you must've had a great CFII!
If you use Jepps, just go across the briefing strip and it's done for you. If you're using NACO...I dunno, use Jepps . Just don't forget to brief the runway (length and turnoff) and the lights you expect to see when you break out (or what you're looking for to descend that extra 100 feet).
The addition I would make is to look at the airport layout - which is not on the Jepp approaches. I really like the Jepp format and detail, with that one exception. And my CFII harped on the 5 t's, which are a little different than the King t's. His order was Turn, Time, Twist (or Tune), Throttle, Talk. Every heading change, you go through the list and consider if you need to take action on any of the 5 items.Actually, the VOLPE format on all the NACO plates now works just like the Jepp briefing strip. About the only thing that isn't on the NACO plates that IS on the Jepps is the nonstandard takeoff and alternate minimums, which you have to look up elsewhere.
With either chart format, I just work through the chart, starting at the top left, going from left to right, and top to bottom, and I've covered everything I need for the approach. Still have the normal airplane checks, but there's a short approach and landing checklist that covers that stuff.
That is all I use. I don't like acronyms nor mnemonics as I think I have said on several occasions.Anyone ever use the audio panel? Just read accross it. Com 1/2 , tuned to the right freqs, nav1,2, marker beacons, all are up on there.
and you live in San Diego. Is your aunt Martha involved in aviation in some capacity?(have an aunt named Martha which is helpful),