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#1
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Seems to me that it's been a while since we had a good brouhaha over
pretakeoff checklists. Most of use use either ABBCCCDDE (or is it AABBCCDDE? Or ABBBCCCCDDEEFG?) or CBSIFTCB or some other variant. I'm curious what you use and WHY? What have you added or subtracted to the "base" checklist to fit your specific glider or operation, or to prevent problems you have encountered. I personally use CBSIFTCB in all the gliders I fly. After that is complete I'm OK hooking up the rope, then I review WET (Wind, Emergency, Traffic) and give the signal to launch. |
#2
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On Mar 23, 8:20*am, Tony wrote:
Seems to me that it's been a while since we had a good brouhaha over pretakeoff checklists. *Most of use use either ABBCCCDDE (or is it AABBCCDDE? Or ABBBCCCCDDEEFG?) or CBSIFTCB or some other variant. *I'm curious what you use and WHY? *What have you added or subtracted to the "base" checklist to fit your specific glider or operation, or to prevent problems you have encountered. I personally use CBSIFTCB in all the gliders I fly. After that is complete I'm OK hooking up the rope, then I review WET (Wind, Emergency, Traffic) and give the signal to launch. Ditto the checklist you use, mostly due to law of primacy. Frank Whiteley |
#3
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On Mar 23, 7:24*am, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:20*am, Tony wrote: Seems to me that it's been a while since we had a good brouhaha over pretakeoff checklists. *Most of use use either ABBCCCDDE (or is it AABBCCDDE? Or ABBBCCCCDDEEFG?) or CBSIFTCB or some other variant. *I'm curious what you use and WHY? *What have you added or subtracted to the "base" checklist to fit your specific glider or operation, or to prevent problems you have encountered. I personally use CBSIFTCB in all the gliders I fly. After that is complete I'm OK hooking up the rope, then I review WET (Wind, Emergency, Traffic) and give the signal to launch. Ditto the checklist you use, mostly due to law of primacy. Frank Whiteley I don't know CBSIFTCB. I use A ltimiter B elts B allast C ontrols C anopy C able D ivebrakes D irection (wind) E mergency plan ... and for landing: F laps U ndercarriage S peed T rim A irbrakes L ook L and |
#4
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Good lists.
The only things I've forgotten multiple times a Drinking water (sitting on the hose) Oxygen (main valve closed) Sunglasses (left in the car) They won't cause an accident - but the first two require coming back to land. 9B |
#5
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On Mar 23, 8:31*am, Grider Pirate wrote:
On Mar 23, 7:24*am, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Mar 23, 8:20*am, Tony wrote: Seems to me that it's been a while since we had a good brouhaha over pretakeoff checklists. *Most of use use either ABBCCCDDE (or is it AABBCCDDE? Or ABBBCCCCDDEEFG?) or CBSIFTCB or some other variant. *I'm curious what you use and WHY? *What have you added or subtracted to the "base" checklist to fit your specific glider or operation, or to prevent problems you have encountered. I personally use CBSIFTCB in all the gliders I fly. After that is complete I'm OK hooking up the rope, then I review WET (Wind, Emergency, Traffic) and give the signal to launch. Ditto the checklist you use, mostly due to law of primacy. Frank Whiteley I don't know CBSIFTCB. *I use A ltimiter B elts B allast C ontrols C anopy C able D ivebrakes D irection (wind) E mergency plan .. and for landing: F laps U ndercarriage S peed T rim A irbrakes L ook L and C ontrols B allast S traps I nstruments F laps T rim C anopy B rakes W ater U ndercarriage L loose items F laps S peed T rim A irbrakes L ook L and as the eventual migration from USTALL in the late '70's. Some of the liturgy of soaring. |
#6
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On Mar 23, 7:48*am, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:31*am, Grider Pirate wrote: On Mar 23, 7:24*am, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Mar 23, 8:20*am, Tony wrote: Seems to me that it's been a while since we had a good brouhaha over pretakeoff checklists. *Most of use use either ABBCCCDDE (or is it AABBCCDDE? Or ABBBCCCCDDEEFG?) or CBSIFTCB or some other variant. *I'm curious what you use and WHY? *What have you added or subtracted to the "base" checklist to fit your specific glider or operation, or to prevent problems you have encountered. I personally use CBSIFTCB in all the gliders I fly. After that is complete I'm OK hooking up the rope, then I review WET (Wind, Emergency, Traffic) and give the signal to launch. Ditto the checklist you use, mostly due to law of primacy. Frank Whiteley I don't know CBSIFTCB. *I use A ltimiter B elts B allast C ontrols C anopy C able D ivebrakes D irection (wind) E mergency plan .. and for landing: F laps U ndercarriage S peed T rim A irbrakes L ook L and C ontrols B allast S traps I nstruments F laps T rim C anopy B rakes W ater U ndercarriage L loose items F laps S peed T rim A irbrakes L ook L and as the eventual migration from USTALL in the late '70's. *Some of the liturgy of soaring. Does "Land" mean anything beyond the obvious? 9B |
#7
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The ABC pre-takeoff checklist came from Schweizer gliders that had the
list posted on the instrument panel. I remember a CFI revalidation course I presented some years ago, where I asked the 80 CFIs to write the list on a piece of paper. Doris checked the results. Not a single instructor got the list correct. This indicates one of the primary problems: Pilots are not trained to memorize the list so it can be used in gliders without a posted checklist. Our ASK-13 has a factory supplied pre-takeoff checklist with two items: Close and lock canopy, close and lock dive brakes. My recent ten-year accident summary indicates 50% of glider fatalities occurred during the first few seconds of flight, so performing an adequate pre-takeoff checklist is an important ingredient to flight safety. The most common pre-takeoff checklist (English language) is CB-SIFT- CB. Most of us have added some letters to this list, inserting a W for “Wind,” And an all-important E for “Emergency plan.” This results in the recommended, CB-SWIFT-CBE. Arguably, this can be considered the basic universal per-takeoff checklist. The reality is this checklist is not universally adequate, because our gliders may have some complexity needing to be checked before takeoff. The factory-supplied checklist must be used, and takes precedence over a memorized checklist in case of some important item unique to that glider. In addition, there may be items important to check such as the flight computer, data logger, etc. My written pre-takeoff checklist is rather extensive (Duo Discus) and includes the factory items plus essential items like removing my wallet from my back pocket and unzipping my fly. For more information about this subject, you might consider a booklet titled , “Preventing Glider Accidents” or a DVD titled, “Preventing Launching Accidents” available on our web site: WWW.EGLIDER.ORG The DVD is especially suited for club safety meetings using a laptop and projector. Tom Knauff |
#8
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I am a big believer in written checklists. There's a big reason the
airlines don't use memorized acronyms. Mike Schumann On 3/23/2010 11:23 AM, Tom wrote: The ABC pre-takeoff checklist came from Schweizer gliders that had the list posted on the instrument panel. I remember a CFI revalidation course I presented some years ago, where I asked the 80 CFIs to write the list on a piece of paper. Doris checked the results. Not a single instructor got the list correct. This indicates one of the primary problems: Pilots are not trained to memorize the list so it can be used in gliders without a posted checklist. Our ASK-13 has a factory supplied pre-takeoff checklist with two items: Close and lock canopy, close and lock dive brakes. My recent ten-year accident summary indicates 50% of glider fatalities occurred during the first few seconds of flight, so performing an adequate pre-takeoff checklist is an important ingredient to flight safety. The most common pre-takeoff checklist (English language) is CB-SIFT- CB. Most of us have added some letters to this list, inserting a W for “Wind,” And an all-important E for “Emergency plan.” This results in the recommended, CB-SWIFT-CBE. Arguably, this can be considered the basic universal per-takeoff checklist. The reality is this checklist is not universally adequate, because our gliders may have some complexity needing to be checked before takeoff. The factory-supplied checklist must be used, and takes precedence over a memorized checklist in case of some important item unique to that glider. In addition, there may be items important to check such as the flight computer, data logger, etc. My written pre-takeoff checklist is rather extensive (Duo Discus) and includes the factory items plus essential items like removing my wallet from my back pocket and unzipping my fly. For more information about this subject, you might consider a booklet titled , “Preventing Glider Accidents” or a DVD titled, “Preventing Launching Accidents” available on our web site: WWW.EGLIDER.ORG The DVD is especially suited for club safety meetings using a laptop and projector. Tom Knauff -- Mike Schumann |
#9
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On Mar 23, 11:51*am, Mike Schumann
wrote: I am a big believer in written checklists. *There's a big reason the airlines don't use memorized acronyms. Big ditto. I also have a *written* "leave the house" checklist and a "written" post-assembly checklist. RD ( stands for Regards, -Doug ) ;-) |
#10
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On 3/23/2010 9:12 AM, Doug Hoffman wrote:
On Mar 23, 11:51 am, Mike wrote: I am a big believer in written checklists. There's a big reason the airlines don't use memorized acronyms. Big ditto. I also have a *written* "leave the house" checklist and a "written" post-assembly checklist. RD ( stands for Regards, -Doug ) ;-) Exactly. There isn't a chance I could remember a memorized checklist. Do any pilots other than glider pilots use memorized checklists? |
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