Shepherd
Final Approach
This is going to be considered total and complete blasphemy, but what the hey.
In my experience the preflight passenger briefing is pretty close to being a complete waste of time. Especially when given to someone who is not a pilot and has no experience with flying or airplanes.
While it may make you, as the pilot, feel good to say 'If we should encounter a problem during the course of our roll out, and it becomes obvious that we will not reach our V1 speed as defined by the Pilot Operating Handbook, I will endeavor to bring the aircraft to a safe stop on the runway. If we become airborne, I will try to land ...."
What the passenger hears is "Blah, blah, blah we're all going to die." Or some variation thereof.
I think some airline industry studies will bear out this assumption. There are enough post incident videos available to show you just how bad things can get.
In my own personal universe, not once, in a number of emergency situations , has any passenger ever remembered a single preflight briefing instruction.
What's even more chilling is that I have had a number of pilots in the right seat and cabin staff who have completely freaked out when something untoward and ugly has occurred in flight.
By all means, continue to give your preflight briefing, for no other reason than CYA to mitigate lawsuits. Hand them a written copy and make them put it in a pocket.
But, my experience has been that when things get ugly, you do everyone a far greater service if you calmly and forcefully take control of the situation, explain what's going on and what you are doing and what you expect the passenger to be doing.
If there is some function they can perform, then explain it, but don't be surprised if they can't follow simple directions.
If you are screeching into the microphone, 4 or 5 octaves higher than your normal voice, you are going to make the situation worse, not better. If you can't get control of yourself, you are never going to get control of the passenger.
Also, as I have tried to explain, emergency procedure practice is best done before an actual emergency, not during the emergency.
Here endeth the lesson.
Up coming: How the FAA requirements are killing pilots in bad weather.
In my experience the preflight passenger briefing is pretty close to being a complete waste of time. Especially when given to someone who is not a pilot and has no experience with flying or airplanes.
While it may make you, as the pilot, feel good to say 'If we should encounter a problem during the course of our roll out, and it becomes obvious that we will not reach our V1 speed as defined by the Pilot Operating Handbook, I will endeavor to bring the aircraft to a safe stop on the runway. If we become airborne, I will try to land ...."
What the passenger hears is "Blah, blah, blah we're all going to die." Or some variation thereof.
I think some airline industry studies will bear out this assumption. There are enough post incident videos available to show you just how bad things can get.
In my own personal universe, not once, in a number of emergency situations , has any passenger ever remembered a single preflight briefing instruction.
What's even more chilling is that I have had a number of pilots in the right seat and cabin staff who have completely freaked out when something untoward and ugly has occurred in flight.
By all means, continue to give your preflight briefing, for no other reason than CYA to mitigate lawsuits. Hand them a written copy and make them put it in a pocket.
But, my experience has been that when things get ugly, you do everyone a far greater service if you calmly and forcefully take control of the situation, explain what's going on and what you are doing and what you expect the passenger to be doing.
If there is some function they can perform, then explain it, but don't be surprised if they can't follow simple directions.
If you are screeching into the microphone, 4 or 5 octaves higher than your normal voice, you are going to make the situation worse, not better. If you can't get control of yourself, you are never going to get control of the passenger.
Also, as I have tried to explain, emergency procedure practice is best done before an actual emergency, not during the emergency.
Here endeth the lesson.
Up coming: How the FAA requirements are killing pilots in bad weather.