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#1
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Our club has adopted this landing checklist
U undercarriage S speed T trim A airbrakes R radio intention E enter pattern Plug in water, flaps, etc. if you need it. The emphasis is to have it done and not be doing it along the downwind legl. |
#2
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GUMPS and FUSTALL were taught to me when getting my PPL-SEL ticket
(which I got before finding joy in gliders)... But the landing checklist I learned at Warner Springs (Sky Sailing) has stuck with me best: G ear F laps W ind A ltimeter T rim T raffic S poilers I got into the habit of announcing it prior to (or just entering) downwind, even if the aircraft I was in didn't have retractable gear or flaps. Each step in the mnemonic is a single word, and each word is short and succinct (unlike words such as "undercarriage"). And at the end you're looking outside for both your spoiler check and while looking for traffic - that "head outside the cockpit" is something that I think other checklists don't necessarily cover well. But the bottom line is: Does the checklist work well for you, and does it help you get on the ground reliably and safely (for both you and the others around you)? Any checklist that does these things is a good one in my book! --Noel |
#3
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![]() "None" wrote in message ... Our club has adopted this landing checklist U undercarriage S speed T trim A airbrakes R radio intention E enter pattern Plug in water, flaps, etc. if you need it. The emphasis is to have it done and not be doing it along the downwind legl. My personal feeling is that a landing checklist should be specific to the glider and therefore not include items that make no sense for that particular glider. My reason: Training a new student in a fixed-gear trainer to recite "undercarriage" on each landing AND THEN DO NOTHING is to set them up for future wheels-up landings when they do finally fly retractables. We can expect them to fly the way they have been trained. If they are trained to recite and then ignore certain checklist items, that habit will carry over to future flying. Vaughn |
#4
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On Mar 24, 1:55*pm, "vaughn" wrote:
My reason: Training a new student in a fixed-gear trainer to recite "undercarriage" on each landing AND THEN DO NOTHING is to set them up for future wheels-up landings when they do finally fly retractables. Don't agree. My glider takeoff checklist includes flaps and I seldom fly flapped gliders. I don't do nothing when I get to FLAPS. I respond None. I do most of my power flying in fixed gear singles but the memorized landing check list still includes GEAR and the response "Down" (and sometimes down and welded). Each checklist item should require a response. In my opinion the response "None" is as valid as "Set" or "Down". I realize this is personal preference and it's been done to death here before. Andy (GY) |
#5
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On Mar 24, 3:48*pm, "noel.wade" wrote:
GUMPS and FUSTALL were taught to me when getting my PPL-SEL ticket (which I got before finding joy in gliders)... But the landing checklist I learned at Warner Springs (Sky Sailing) has stuck with me best: G ear F laps W ind A ltimeter T rim T raffic S poilers But the bottom line is: *Does the checklist work well for you, and does it help you get on the ground reliably and safely (for both you and the others around you)? *Any checklist that does these things is a good one in my book! --Noel Too long for me: who cares about the altimeter once in the pattern, you should always be looking for traffic and announcing on the radio, and items such as speed, trim, flaps, and spoilers are aircraft and pattern specific/airmanship issues, IMHO. I've trimmed mine down to "Wind Water Wheels" (once prior to the pattern, as a reminder to start thinking about how these decision items need to be taken care of) and once again before turning base (to make sure everything is considered and configured) and then concentrate on flying the glider without hitting anybody or breaking anything. This is my equivalent of the classic GUMP check, beloved of all power pilots. The key (for me at least) is to then continually analyse how the pattern is going, and if something isn't right, fix it (i.e. if you are not coming down fast enough, maybe you need to pull the correct handle to get the spoilers out, doofus!) But first of all, fly the glider... The trouble with long checklists is that since many of the items are not done simultaneously, you either have to repeat the checklist multiple times, or interrupt it and continue, etc.. Which takes away brain bytes that better used flying the glider... And I really believe the pattern is absolutely no place for a long written checklist! Anyway, it has worked for me so far.... Kirk 66 |
#6
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After using the USTALL checklist for thirty years, I managed to land a
couple of times without first dumping my water ballast - one of the landings was interesting as the water had leaked out of one wing through a leaky valve during flight and the other was still full (ground loop anyone?). I now use BUSTALL (which is what is likely to happen if you land with one wing full of water and one empty). I also disagree about leaving out the undercarriage check on fixed gear aircraft. When I was training for my single-engine rating years ago in South Africa, the fixed-gear aircraft had a dummy gear switch on the panel with a red and green light. My instructor thought that it was always good practice to check gear and so far his training has worked on me. Mike |
#7
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Mike the Strike wrote:
I also disagree about leaving out the undercarriage check on fixed gear aircraft. When I was training for my single-engine rating years ago in South Africa, the fixed-gear aircraft had a dummy gear switch on the panel with a red and green light. My instructor thought that it was always good practice to check gear and so far his training has worked on me. I used a clothespin in my Ka6E, which I transferred from the spoiler handle to the lip of the cowling. It didn't work perfectly for me, as I forgot my gear once in the Std Cirrus, and twice in the ASW 20 C; fortunately, both gliders had a gear warning horn, so I never landed gear up. I've never forgotten it in the ASH 26 e (2900 hours), so I did learn it eventually. I do have a warning system, just the same. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) |
#8
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![]() "kirk.stant" wrote in message ... This is my equivalent of the classic GUMP check, beloved of all power pilots. Well, perhaps not "beloved" everywhere, or even universlly taught any more. I converted to SEL about 5 years ago, and no mention was ever made of any standard or pneumonic memorized checklist for anything except emergencies. Never once did I check the wheels of my Cessna on downwind. Instead, we used model-specific checklists. In my experience, these laminated checklists are commonly found in most rental aircraft. Model-specific checklists are available for common aircraft at most any pilot's store. www.checkmateaviation.com This is what got me thinking about why that might be, and how it might apply to glider training. Vaughn |
#9
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In article "vaughn" writes:
"kirk.stant" wrote in message ... This is my equivalent of the classic GUMP check, beloved of all power pilots. Well, perhaps not "beloved" everywhere, or even universlly taught any more. I converted to SEL about 5 years ago, and no mention was ever made of any standard or pneumonic memorized checklist for anything except emergencies. Never once did I check the wheels of my Cessna on downwind. Instead, we used model-specific checklists. In my experience, these laminated checklists are commonly found in most rental aircraft. Model-specific checklists are available for common aircraft at most any pilot's store. www.checkmateaviation.com When I learned in 1976, the instructors were fairly clear about using the standard checklist for the aircraft model, from the book. Anything else was considered suspect, and possibly illegal. GUMP seemed obsolete then, and was never taught by anyone I have encountered. This is what got me thinking about why that might be, and how it might apply to glider training. It amazed me when I encountered strings of letters when I started in gliders a couple of years ago. Alan |
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