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#11
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Dave J schreef:
I'm having an embarrassing problem. My brain seems to shut down lately as soon as the key is out of the ignition. It's little things, like leaving my kneeboard (with gas card) or charts in the airplane, forgetting to completely tie down the aircraft, forgetting to properly fill out club paperwork, etc. It's all getting embarrassing, and I'm starting to get a little nervous. So far, I have not done anything stupid in the air -- that I know of -- but, I do wonder if I will. A possible factor is that I'm flying much less than I used to, always alone, and usually with very tight time constraints. Any advice? Does this happen to anybody else? How do you stay focused until your outside the gate? Count yourself lucky. I am still in the stage where my instructor reproaches me my brain quits the moment the wheels touch the grass. Worst of all, he is damned right, too. |
#12
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On Sep 23, 3:38*am, jan olieslagers
wrote: and usually with very tight time constraints. Could this be the root of your problem? Rushing promotes oversight. Allow more time for you to take your time to do the housekeeping duties post flight. |
#13
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In article ,
Blanche wrote: Mike Ash wrote: David Jacobowitz wrote: On Sep 22, 8:26*pm, "Tim" wrote: Use a check list? An obvious enough answer, but a decent one. My objection is that it feels like a slippery slope. Will it lead to a getting dressed checklist, making dinner checklist, etc? :-) I made a "before leaving the airport" checklist after a couple of stupid episodes of forgetfulness, including one where I forgot to put my batteries on charge (not good for a sailplane that can't charge them in flight!). It's very short, just five items. 1: forget anything in plane/trailer/on ramp? 2: batteries on charge? 3: big hangar door properly closed? 4: little hangar door locked? 5: bags in car? Works well, haven't had any major problems since. So far it has not led to a "getting dressed" checklist, but I won't rule out the possibility. Don't laugh. If I have a "grownup" meeting the next day (e.g. job interview, high-level managers meeting, vendor meeting, etc) I lay out all the clothes so I won't miss something in the morning when I'm not terribly coherent. I speak from experience....One day, many years ago, I had a very important client meeting. Forgot to grab my blazer and spent the day feeling under-dressed.... Never again. Despite saying I don't use a checklist for getting dressed, I do follow this plan on rare occasions. Normally I do this the night before I plan to do some winter flying. There's a lot of crap to put on when you're flying without a heater in cold weather, and I'm usually up well before the sun and well before my brain. Helps prevent me from searching for the heavy socks for 20 minutes or realizing I forgot the long underwear only after I've put everything else on. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
#14
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and usually with very tight time constraints.
Could this be the root of your problem? *Rushing promotes oversight. Allow more time for you to take your time to do the housekeeping duties post flight. OOOPS, the above quotation in my original response should have been attributed to to Dave J, not Jan. Sorry Jan! |
#15
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On Sep 23, 8:38*am, BeechSundowner wrote:
and usually with very tight time constraints. Could this be the root of your problem? *Rushing promotes oversight. Allow more time for you to take your time to do the housekeeping duties post flight. Hey, thanks for writing. Yeah, I think it could be. We've got an 18 month old baby and what happens is that I am usually allotted a 3 hour block of time to venture out on my own recognizance. It takes me about 50 minutes to/from the airport, plus preflight, and I'm lucky to get in the air for an hour. Postflight is getting short shrift, I suppose because I'm rushing to get home. -- dave j |
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