I gave a flight review to a guy last week who got so fixated on the pre landing chacklst (in a cherokee), that he lost his SA in the pattern and lost sight of traffic he previously had and accepted visual seperation with. And then when we went to shut down the plane, he misplaced his checklist, so instead of flipping the avionics master off, mixture idle cut-off, mags off, and master off, he decided to unbuckle himself and search the backseat for his checklist with the engine runningMy question is when are these people doing the "read-do" type of checklist usage? Staring down a the checklist can cause a hazard while in the air. I understand a new pilot wont be able to do a "do-verify" type of checklist usage but if they memorize the checklist (which in a C-172 isn't bad) then they can create their own flow relatively quickly. I would also tell them to hanger fly when they can as it is free and they will transition to a "do-verify" system quite easily.
If they are career students the transition to an airline would be much easier.
Flow 'n verify is what I learned and kind of how we roll at my current employer.What are you guys teaching? I learned from a corperate jet pilot, so I've been using flows and verifying with the checklist since day 1 and that's how I plan to teach chacklist use to primary students.
Shutdown checklist for most small pistons...I gave a flight review to a guy last week who got so fixated on the pre landing chacklst (in a cherokee), that he lost his SA in the pattern and lost sight of traffic he previously had and accepted visual seperation with. And then when we went to shut down the plane, he misplaced his checklist, so instead of flipping the avionics master off, mixture idle cut-off, mags off, and master off, he decided to unbuckle himself and search the backseat for his checklist with the engine running. He's a good friend and a decent stick, but the overreliance on a written checklist to get routine stuff done was apparent (emergency checklists are different. Most of them require a very specific order and should be done as a do-list) and inefficient.
Haha. The every time I call ready in the TriPacer I feel like I've missed at least 6 things because the before takeoff checks are so shortHmmm, I guess I just don't care at all.
In these training aircraft, a flow is not going to save much time at all on three items.
Hell referencing a checklist at all on some of these aircraft is borderline ridiculous.
Hmmm, I guess I just don't care at all.
In these training aircraft, a flow is not going to save much time at all on three items.
Hell referencing a checklist at all on some of these aircraft is borderline ridiculous.
Haha. The every time I call ready in the TriPacer I feel like I've missed at least 6 things because the before takeoff checks are so short
Hmmm, I guess I just don't care at all.
In these training aircraft, a flow is not going to save much time at all on three items.
Hell referencing a checklist at all on some of these aircraft is borderline ridiculous.
Additionally, I have lots of unwritten checklists that I follow to the T. GUMP is one example that works well in complex aircraft.I typically don't reference it for normal procedures in an airplane I'm comfortable/familiar in, but it's always flipped to the emergency page just in case I need it...
Stop whining, ranting and getting headaches because other people use a different procedure than you do.I get headaches when I get in the plane with a guy and he whips out the checklist and starts reading and moving switches like its an instruction manual.
The one I was once taught was the 4 MsShutdown checklist for most small pistons...
Magic (EFIS)
Music (radios)
Mixture
Mags
Master
Personal technique, but I usually kill the anti collision lights right before the master. Others like to leave them on all the time, especially if you a) only fly in the daytime or b) have a rotating beacon.