studying for IFR. Saw a thread from years ago, posted by dtuuri, regarding “ditty” he uses for IAP setup/brief. Anyone know it?
Thanks in advance.
As you can see, the newbies like the briefing strip. They probably prefer the ABC-style keyboards over QWERTY, too, I suppose. The fact is, if you're a competent pilot, no matter where the latest group of smart people think they should hide the most important information for everybody else to find — you will come up with a way to locate and use it. Until the next group changes it again, that is (see:
https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/fli...ification_of_Airport_Sketch_Final_Bearing.pdf.)
Here's a link to one of the studies that led to the "briefing strip":
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA298130.pdf
The ditty you asked about reminds me to check for certain potential traps, not merely to learn a certain value. As such, the briefing strip made no difference to how I used to set up and fly an approach than before they conjured the thing up. Except it took longer to find the information in the strips than I was used to and I didn't appreciate being effed with like that.
Also, I only published the first verse, there's another I added as time went by and my twice per year recurrent simulator sessions at FSI revealed even more potential traps when "flying" with a diabolical FSI instructor.
Whatever you choose to adopt (and it really doesn't matter as long as it works for you), please look for the known traps the memory aid is reminding you to look for. The example in the tutorial I linked to (may be down now as I've found a new webmaster who is working on updating my site) was "course". Yes, the value is noteworthy, but the thing is — you want to see if it changes direction at the FAF! Does the "briefing strip" help you think about that possibility or does my "ditty" do a better job of that? Or does, say, your own copy-written original mnemonic or poem work best of all? Whichever it is — use that.