timwinters
Ejection Handle Pulled
Stephen,
Thanks for that!
I always appreciate an informed and dispassionate discussion.
Stephen,
Thanks for that!
I always appreciate an informed and dispassionate discussion.
and after a story like this you have the nerve to say to me that you would not sign me off because I don't use a checklist.
You are obviously so tied to a check list that if it isn't on there you can't think clearly enough to realize it needs to be done.
Personally I prefer my way to yours. I would have caught your dumb mistake as part of my pre-flight mantra that I mentioned earlier.
If you are going to be a thoughtless slave to a checklist better make sure that it is 100 pages long and that every possible eventuality is covered, or be prepared for your canopy to come open in flight because it wasn't written down in black and white to check it.
Stephen.
If I was doing a BFR with a pilot who didn't use a checklist, especially in a complex / IFR / RG, double especially in a RG, I wouldn't sign the guy off ether.
I'm not so sure about that. With two pilots, there is always the "I thought you did that!" problem.
Why do people like making such busy, complicated check lists for small airplanes? ...Get in a Warrior or Skyhawk, your talking 15 pages to find what to check before doing your run up.
What are the things that will kill you or get you in a world of hurt that you check and double check?
I just don't understand the negativity towards the people that use checklists. It takes a lot of moving parts to get an airplane in the air, and any one of them can bring you down in hurry. A checklist is just a list of things you don't want to forget. You are going to do them anyway. What's wrong with writing it down? Especially if you don't fly every day, or even every week.
Now for emergency situations, you should be able to react instantly without a checklist, but even then once the emergency is handled, or you have time, you should still use a checklist to verify you didn't forget anything, otherwise, you may just have an eventful landing.
I just don't understand the negativity towards the people that use checklists. It takes a lot of moving parts to get an airplane in the air, and any one of them can bring you down in hurry. A checklist is just a list of things you don't want to forget. You are going to do them anyway. What's wrong with writing it down? Especially if you don't fly every day, or even every week.
Now for emergency situations, you should be able to react instantly without a checklist, but even then once the emergency is handled, or you have time, you should still use a checklist to verify you didn't forget anything, otherwise, you may just have an eventful landing.
Checklist discipline requires, well, discipline.
I'm sure most instructors have watched a student go through the checklist and skip items.
For instance, he's on item 5 of the runup checklist, and you know he missed item 4. Easy to do - there's a natural tendency to "float around" a little - I know I have to guard against that. I have him go back to item 1 to reinforce the missed item on the second run through.
And that HAS brought down planes - the jet where they missed pitot heat from an interrupted checklist and then got spatially disoriented and spun in comes to mind.
I like a nice 1 page checklist. I can't stand the 15 page flipbooks.
Truthfully, I find over-bloated checklists dangerous once in the air for obvious reasons.
I am hoping Gucci will chime in here, since he's a KC-10 guy and since that's basically a newer COTS airplane, I'm curious if those guys use flows or our style of "challenge and response" checklists.
That's pretty close to what we do (less the FE). While the AC is outside doing the walkaround, the CP will setup the cockpit using a flow, then once the AC sits down, it's all challenge & response.We use a flow for the initial instrument scan(loading flight plan, testing radio systems, testing the autopilot, etc.) Once we all get in the seat, it is all challenge and response. Flight Engineer reads the checklist and each pilot responds with the correct response.