Blackhawk
Well-Known Member
Yeah, because that's exactly what I said in my original post.Thank god you saved the day!
Yeah, because that's exactly what I said in my original post.Thank god you saved the day!
See the change. Spell correct and I went back and fixed it. Next?What is this the "U" in FOQUA?
If fuel issues are being covered in AQP then they have probably come from FOQUA events. If this is the case then captains got into a situation.
As for me personally, just google my name and Flying Magazine and you will see that this is not the case and it is you who are reading too much into this.
Thank god you saved the day!
Ok?You must be one of them millennials they keep talking about.
I don't disagree. But once the flight is in the air it is primarily on the crew as they know the fuel state and dispatcher may not.You have done AQP for 2016 right? I'm just asking because maybe you have it coming up in this final month.
Contingency planning and risk management were discussed within the context of fuel utilization. In the situations I recall being discussed it wasn't necessarily a low-fuel situation only sort of issue. It was a clear "the crew didn't really know how much fuel they had," in this case and then a discussion of maybe we should be sure to check our NOTAMs before we dispatch to an airport that may be closing at a certain time.
So, my point is, it's not just the FOs fault or the CAs fault or the Crews fault or the Dispatcher's fault.
It's OUR fault if something goes sideways. It's also OUR actions that keep something from going sideways.
Well you laid blame on FO's so clearly you and other captains are free from fault. Maybe next time you're in AQP you can spend an extra five minutes on CRM. Understand that you work with your crew instead of point fingers.Yeah, because that's exactly what I said in my original post.
Well you laid blame on FO's so clearly you and other captains are free from fault. Maybe next time you're in AQP you can spend an extra five minutes on CRM. Understand that you work with your crew instead of point fingers.
Well you laid blame on FO's so clearly you and other captains are free from fault. Maybe next time you're in AQP you can spend an extra five minutes on CRM. Understand that you work with your crew instead of point fingers.
As for me personally, just google my name and Flying Magazine and you will see that this is not the case and it is you who are reading too much into this.
Crap. Caught me.I googled your name and Flying Magazine, and all I could find was this:
http://www.flyingmag.com/pilots-places/pilots-adventures-more/cop-tickets-illegally-parked-blackhawk
Did you put that ticket on your airlineapps?![]()
Ok since I'm part of the cupcake/millennial generation I might be slow. We aren't talking about the first person article. We are discussing his latest airline training event.Did you even read his article? Let me post it for you again.
http://www.flyingmag.com/technique/i-learned-about-flying/lady-luck
Ok since I'm part of the cupcake/millennial generation I might be slow. We aren't talking about the first person article. We are discussing his latest airline training event.
I'm not gonna even hold back any here...
The organization he and I are a member of have a wonderful training department, check airmen, and know exactly what they're doing. That said, from a purely academic analysis of what is being taught - they've forgotten about CRM as it is only casually discussed within the realm of TEM.
I'd love to see a greater emphasis on direct CRM training, specifically interpersonal communication skills and leadership/followership training.
I didn't have to accuse him. He wrote it himself. Once again, we are not talking about his first person narrative of something that happened while he was drilling with the Guard. We are talking about an airline training scenario and his comments made from that.You accused him of acting perfect and never making a mistake when in fact he has an entire article written about being in a fuel critical situation and all the mistakes he made. Your argument is invalid.
Cupcake generation is the preferred nomenclature.Plane crashes in MDE... blame millennials. Got it!
It's a new term to me, actually. I'm trying to figure out if they are talking about gourmet cupcakes, or grocery store ones in a plastic container?Cupcake generation is the preferred nomenclature.