IslandFlyer
Well-Known Member
How low?
How long?
Which way?
How long?
Which way?
On my CFII checkride I briefed an approach and the DPE threw the charts in the back of the plane. He says "Ok bud, now out of all that crap you just recited, how much do you remember?"
That's where I get kind of confused... I've flown with some guys that want every single letter read aloud and some that seem to only want "the important bits". Whichever technique doesn't bust a checkride sounds fine to me..."this approach, that runway"... "the usual stuff". Questions?
That is what some consider briefed. Others want to explain new hid lighting and how bright it is in lumens.
Brief the approach in whatever method you want as long as you can do it the same way every time and then shoot the approach without having to reread the plate.
Yeah some communities are big on reading the page number BS, but seriously, isn't it going to become pretty apparent almost immediately during the review if the pilot and copilot are not on the same page? Freq's? Who freaking cares?
Top to bottom, left to right. Works good, lasts long time.
"This airplane.. That runway... Questions?"![]()
On my CFII checkride I briefed an approach and the DPE threw the charts in the back of the plane. He says "Ok bud, now out of all that crap you just recited, how much do you remember?"
It's sort of completely pointless to have an approach briefing for the airport you fly into on pretty much every other leg of everyday, particularly if it's VFR. I don't care what the page number is, what the date is, what the associated FAF/DH/DA are. Why? Because you're going to be flying a visual approach so pretty much none of that matters at all.
To be fair, though, unlike in a single seat jet where you know what's going on inside your brain, and where you all ready know what your plan is, in a crew airplane you have to verbally let everyone involved know what it is you're thinking beforehand. The approach brief is much more significant there, as different people are going to solve the same problem different ways. Having different ideas about what's going to happen among the members of a crew is a bad thing.
I love the guys who will brief a visual like it's an ILS to mins.. I really love it when they brief the missed on a visual..
"Questions?"
"Well, yes, actually.. Do you really think we are going to climb to 900', then a climbing right turn to MEM and up to 5,000 and hold today??"
I love the guys who will brief a visual like it's an ILS to mins.. I really love it when they brief the missed on a visual..
"Questions?"
"Well, yes, actually.. Do you really think we are going to climb to 900', then a climbing right turn to MEM and up to 5,000 and hold today??"
No. Furthermore, I doubt you're going to do that even if it's not VMC. Not saying you shouldn't brief it, but...eh...sweet words:
What exactly are the minimums for this here visual approach?![]()
True, but I know a couple of check airmen here that would go ballistic if that's all you did. .
I've also never understood the handing over controls when the AP is on to do the brief. It wasn't always policy here, but the feds made us add that in a couple of years ago. Apparently I can't make sure the computer is still flying properly while I read some items off a chart. So instead I hand it off to my partner who is engaged even more than I am with listening as well as just looking at the chart. Yep, makes perfect sense...