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Do YOU have one? Do you rehearse it or practice it while the pressure
is off? If not, why not? What do you use for immediate action and why? |
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On Jun 17, 4:46 pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote:
Do YOU have one? Do you rehearse it or practice it while the pressure is off? If not, why not? What do you use for immediate action and why? What I've been working on is a checklist for my wife to use to save her life (and maybe mine) in the event of a sudden incapacitation of the PIC (me). It's a turbine twin so it's no small task for someone unfamiliar to get it on the ground safely. She has a ppsel but hasn't flown solo in almost thirty years. At least she knows what a good approach and landing looks like. In this case, a good landing would not require reuse of the airplane. K l e i n |
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![]() "K l e i n" wrote in message ... On Jun 17, 4:46 pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote: Do YOU have one? Do you rehearse it or practice it while the pressure is off? If not, why not? What do you use for immediate action and why? What I've been working on is a checklist for my wife to use to save her life (and maybe mine) in the event of a sudden incapacitation of the PIC (me). It's a turbine twin so it's no small task for someone unfamiliar to get it on the ground safely. She has a ppsel but hasn't flown solo in almost thirty years. At least she knows what a good approach and landing looks like. In this case, a good landing would not require reuse of the airplane. K l e i n Have you considered the AOPA Pinch Hitters Course? see: http://www.avweb.com/news/safety/183023-1.html -- Regards, BobF. |
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Bob F. wrote:
"K l e i n" wrote in message ... On Jun 17, 4:46 pm, "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote: Do YOU have one? Do you rehearse it or practice it while the pressure is off? If not, why not? What do you use for immediate action and why? What I've been working on is a checklist for my wife to use to save her life (and maybe mine) in the event of a sudden incapacitation of the PIC (me). It's a turbine twin so it's no small task for someone unfamiliar to get it on the ground safely. She has a ppsel but hasn't flown solo in almost thirty years. At least she knows what a good approach and landing looks like. In this case, a good landing would not require reuse of the airplane. K l e i n Have you considered the AOPA Pinch Hitters Course? see: http://www.avweb.com/news/safety/183023-1.html My wife took this years ago. She also soloed, but never went on to get her license. She did say there is nothing like flying alone to have the confidence. She thought the AOPA course would not satisfy that. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP KSWI |
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Of course not. The checklist for a goose coming through the windshield is
completely different than smoke in the cockpit is completely different from the engine burping and stopping is completely different from ... (insert multiple scenarios here). Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote in message ... Do YOU have one? Do you rehearse it or practice it while the pressure is off? If not, why not? What do you use for immediate action and why? |
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![]() "RST Engineering" wrote in message m... Of course not. The checklist for a goose coming through the windshield is completely different than smoke in the cockpit is completely different from the engine burping and stopping is completely different from ... (insert multiple scenarios here). Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle It is not a goose, it is a DUCK... |
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If it is a duck, trust me, you are goosed.
Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Blueskies" wrote in message ... It is not a goose, it is a DUCK... |
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On Jun 17, 7:21*pm, "RST Engineering" wrote:
Of course not. *The checklist for a goose coming through the windshield is completely different than smoke in the cockpit is completely different from the engine burping and stopping is completely different from ... (insert multiple scenarios here). Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." * * * * --Aristotle "Ol Shy & Bashful" wrote in ... Do YOU have one? Do you rehearse it or practice it while the pressure is off? If not, why not? What do you use for immediate action and why?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text OF COURSE NOT? Do you just wait to see what happens before you make any kind of plan? Jim I'm not trying to start an argument and of course every emergency is likely to be different. What I AM trying to do is make people think ahead of emergencies. This most recent accident where the pilot dead sticked a Bonanza onto a 2000' grass strip and wrecked the airplane prompted the post. He was headed for my base of operations which is about 10 miles away when he said his engine quit. There is a lot of swampy area but there is also I-65 which borders the strip he chose for landing. I suspect the pressure got to him and he picked the best of his personal options. Don't know the man or his capabilities so its dumb to say what he "coulda woulda shoulda done". BTW, in over 50 years I've had more than 15 actual emergencies and any number of minor ones like birds coming thru the windshield. Cheers Ol S&B |
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Well, I've got just over 40 years and about 5000 hours and only two
emergencies that I considered entertaining, so I've got a bit of a way to catch you ... but ... Both emergencies were engine failures, one a double ignition failure and one a jug that decided it liked it better alone than with its 5 buddies. Those you can plan for. The first one was at 200 AGL, but since our airport is at 800 AGL from the surrounding neighborhood, the freeway was the optimum answer, and one that we had planned for from day one. The other one was from 5000 AGL over the COntinental Divide (now I know why Continental Engines named it that) with a dragstrip right below me. Both can be planned for, and if "what the hell do I do when the fan stops" isn't in your head during those times, then your instructor hasn't been nasty enough with you. I've had birds on the wings and birds on the glass, but never a bird big enough to go THROUGH the glass. I've had electrical smoke in the cockpit, asymmetric flap failure that taught me snap rolls right NOW, and some minor crap from student blunders that caught me unawares. Nothing that could be planned for; just take it as it is and do what you need to do to remedy the situation. OF COURSE for the common ones and OF COURSE NOT for the ones that are just plain off the wall. Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "OF COURSE NOT? Do you just wait to see what happens before you make any kind of plan? BTW, in over 50 years I've had more than 15 actual emergencies and any number of minor ones like birds coming thru the windshield. Cheers Ol S&B |
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On Tue, 17 Jun 2008 15:46:47 -0700 (PDT), "Ol Shy & Bashful"
wrote in : Do YOU have one? Do you rehearse it or practice it while the pressure is off? If not, why not? What do you use for immediate action and why? This is the first I've heard of that term. Are you referring to emergency procedures contained in the aircraft's POH? |
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