denverpilot
Tied Down
Food for thought CFI padawan...
I liken that acronym to a waiter/waitress at a restaurant who takes your order without writing it down. There is no upside to the memorization and the person is likely to get it wrong.
No disagreement there. I never get that thing right. And determining airworthiness is something one is doing on the damned ground anyway, where looking it up costs you nothing in loss of SA or safety. It's nice if one can memorize that whole thing accurately, but it doesn't even cover that an AD might throw the whole baby out with the bathwater, or the whole picture of MELs and modern aircraft manuals with lists for day/night and IFR/VFR.
Abeam intended point of landing, gear down. (Thud! under the seat)
That one ignores that a large number of ops IFR, even VMC, are straight in. Careful. Cleared for the visual after being vectored to final... or flying the approach. Have to add "at FAF" or "glideslope intercept" as an "always gear down unless there's a damn good reason to keep them up" point besides "abeam downwind".
How do you eliminate that 1/100 error rate so that you use the checklist every single time, as a single pilot?
There's a certain CFI hanging around here who likes to simply write whatever the student is forgetting regularly on a post it note and slapping it right on the glareshield in front of their face until they stop forgetting it.
Why put it in your lap on the chart. Stick it right where your eyeballs will be. Near the ASI. Or the AI. Put it slightly in the way of something you like to look at during the descent. Wherever your eyeballs go, put it there. Make it cover half of an instrument. Make it annoying to look around.
Write CHECKLIST? on it until you don't need it anymore to ask yourself that question on your own.