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Calling for engine starts en français
You're not quite sure what to expect when you meet that standardization pilot.
Let me give you some guidance.
Show up on time and prepared, with the materials required for a pre-flight briefing. Don't show up 5 minutes late, with no marker and nothing prepared on your white board.
This means you should probably have something already prepared on the white board that includes things like:
That means that you treat the standardization pilot as the student, not as a standardization pilot. Don't refer to the student in third person. "I would tell the student this" or "Now I would ask the student that."
Ask me those questions, tell me what you want to tell me, as your student. My job as a standardization pilot is to evaluate your ability to lead a discussion or briefing on a manuever. Show me you have that ability!
Avoid saying things like "bump power" or "pull back". We are taught to use very specific instructions with the students, and it is heavily emphasized. "Add 100 RPM" or "Increase pitch 1 degree on the horizon" are phrases you need to be comfortable with. Generalized statements tend to lead to students overcontrolling and making erratic inputs.
Throughout the entire standardization event you should act and conduct yourself as the instructor. If you don't know things, tell me you can look it up. Admitting errors is OK, but saying "I don't know" isn't. The student needs to know it's ok to not know everything, but should also understand that there is always someplace to find information.
You must have instructional knowledge of the aircraft! We need to ensure you're going to teach a student the basics of the airframe and systems of the aircraft. These are things we look for on stage checks, and they start with the students primary instructor! Just to name a few:
Got questions? Lets start the learning process.
Let me give you some guidance.
Show up on time and prepared, with the materials required for a pre-flight briefing. Don't show up 5 minutes late, with no marker and nothing prepared on your white board.
This means you should probably have something already prepared on the white board that includes things like:
- Title of discussion or presentation
- A brief overview or description
- Listed references for the student to use or refer to
- A diagram or drawing depicting the manuever or topic
That means that you treat the standardization pilot as the student, not as a standardization pilot. Don't refer to the student in third person. "I would tell the student this" or "Now I would ask the student that."
Ask me those questions, tell me what you want to tell me, as your student. My job as a standardization pilot is to evaluate your ability to lead a discussion or briefing on a manuever. Show me you have that ability!
Avoid saying things like "bump power" or "pull back". We are taught to use very specific instructions with the students, and it is heavily emphasized. "Add 100 RPM" or "Increase pitch 1 degree on the horizon" are phrases you need to be comfortable with. Generalized statements tend to lead to students overcontrolling and making erratic inputs.
Throughout the entire standardization event you should act and conduct yourself as the instructor. If you don't know things, tell me you can look it up. Admitting errors is OK, but saying "I don't know" isn't. The student needs to know it's ok to not know everything, but should also understand that there is always someplace to find information.
You must have instructional knowledge of the aircraft! We need to ensure you're going to teach a student the basics of the airframe and systems of the aircraft. These are things we look for on stage checks, and they start with the students primary instructor! Just to name a few:
- What kind of flaps do we have? What benefit do they provide?
- What kind of ailerons do we have? What design characteristic do they have that is beneficial?
- What does the stall strip do?
- How much fuel is in this fuel tank? How much is unusable? How much fuel is at the tab?
- Tire inflation numbers, and strut extention tolerance limits.
- How the Piper External Power plug works
- Show me the Vacuum pump. How do you know if it stops working? What instruments will stop functioning?
- Be able to identify basic components of the engine, and what their function is
- The Piper Pitot/Static system is pretty unique; be sure you understand the design of the mast , and what happens when the various ports become blocked.
Got questions? Lets start the learning process.