To me the key, and one I preach when I teach, is a consistent SOP. One so consistent it becomes a habit. Habits are hard to break. That SOP may be associated with a written checklist, a mnemonic, a flow, whatever, but the key is consistency so that mental (and sometime physical) alarms go off automatically when you don't follow it.
Personal examples:
1. The closest I ever came to a gear up was when I saw another pilots' gear deployment procedure, liked it and tried to adopt it instead of the one I had been using for a long time. The gear warning came on to save me on my second flight with the new procedure.
2. I had a engine emergency in the clouds over the Rockies that required a diversion. Made it to an airport and landed. I know I didn't use a checklist to land and don't have an actual memory of consciously deploying the gear. Of course, I don't recall deploying the flaps either. Best I can figure, I put (or was mentally prompted to put) the gear down at exactly the same point in the approach to landing I always did.
3. I was getting checked out in a new airplane. I told the CFI my gear deployment procedure. As we were approaching the airport, the CFI started chuckling. I asked him what he was laughing about. He pointed to my hand, which was hovering and shaking in anticipation over the gear handle. My VFR gear deployment involves the intersection of two events; one had occurred earlier than usual but my body reacted.
Personal examples:
1. The closest I ever came to a gear up was when I saw another pilots' gear deployment procedure, liked it and tried to adopt it instead of the one I had been using for a long time. The gear warning came on to save me on my second flight with the new procedure.
2. I had a engine emergency in the clouds over the Rockies that required a diversion. Made it to an airport and landed. I know I didn't use a checklist to land and don't have an actual memory of consciously deploying the gear. Of course, I don't recall deploying the flaps either. Best I can figure, I put (or was mentally prompted to put) the gear down at exactly the same point in the approach to landing I always did.
3. I was getting checked out in a new airplane. I told the CFI my gear deployment procedure. As we were approaching the airport, the CFI started chuckling. I asked him what he was laughing about. He pointed to my hand, which was hovering and shaking in anticipation over the gear handle. My VFR gear deployment involves the intersection of two events; one had occurred earlier than usual but my body reacted.
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