This thread's kinda interesting. It reads more like
"Techniques of the Airline Captain"
Haven't seen too many FOs speak up here. That's interesting, because it seems like the habits of FOs out there are the subject of alot of conversation.
Me personally, I try to do the following things.
As best I can manage, I'm always the first crewmember to the airplane. If I can be there when the airplane pulls up to the gate, I am. Since my duties include things like the pre-flight walkaround, this allows for maximum time to correct deficiencies prior to departure. And I won't front- since I'm a newbie, it gives me maximum time to figure out/look up something I'm not sure about.
The first time I fly with a new captain, I tell them the same thing. "I'm not totally new to 121 ops, but I'm new here. I leave my ego on the ground. I'm a sponge, and I'm all ears. Any input or criticism you might have is more than welcome." I've noticed this opens me up to some things that are downright weird or silly 'techniques' but have yet to see anything that compromises safety or common sense. It does, however, get them talking. Bridging the gap between "that crusty old-timer" and the "Ipod-packing RJ course takers" is step one in building crew cohesion. It's what gets you working together... not to mention LEARNING some things.
I learn a new technique, trick, or finer point about the airplane and the business every day I go to work.
Which leads us into my NEXT point, which may or may not be something everyone considers.
That old timer sitting next to you (or even that younger guy) might just keel over in flight. He might be too exhausted to fly and nod off en route... or he might have a heart attack and die right there in the seat. He might just be a total dufus that'll do something dangerous. Either way, it's your responsibility to be more than the one "assisting the captain." These are two pilot airplanes- you're a redundant two piece system, not a meat based autopilot. Every first officer, regardless of upgrade expectations is a captain in training and may well find himself suddenly a "single pilot operator" some day. Consider the recent event where the FO died in flight. What if it were reversed, and you were alone in that cockpit?
Every day an FO goes to work, they are a "Captain in training." Your job is to overlap everything the captain does, just like he does you. If he misses something important in his flows or checks, you should be able to determine where, and what. A Captain has the final decision making authority and responsibility on the airplane, of course, but that does not make him superhuman and incapable of making mistakes. If you don't know what he or she is doing and it looks wrong, ask. (I stress- ASK.. assuming it's not dangerous it is not your position to decide what's better- just to alert the Captain!) You'll either get educated on something you didn't know or you'll correct a potentially dangerous scenario. Approach it with that attitude and in time you'll have the skill set to deal with an emergency that's not on the checklist, should one ever happen.
Don't forget here- dealing with an emergency has more to consider than calling for the checklist and running through it.
Your homework, for everybody, both left seat and right:
Example: Your captain is incapacitated. You don't know why. You just notice you were punching expected altitudes for the STAR into your FMS and when you look up, he's drooling on himself. You shake him. You eventually rub your knuckles against his sternum, hard. No response. You check a pulse. Unsure.
What do you do?
Consider: Involvement of the rest of the crew. Declaration of emergency, diversion scenarios, and how you'd proceed from there. Is there a doctor on board? Do you risk compromising security and panicking the passengers by having the captain treated in flight, either in or outside the cockpit?
If you decide not to open the door.. what do you tell the FA? How do you best utilize their skill set to help them do their job so you can do yours?
Discuss.
(... and stop pissing in each other's cheerios... that's for 'other' threads..)