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Some c5 hatin...

  • Thread starter Thread starter Otto77
  • Start date Start date
  • Watchers Watchers 17

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Otto77

Snacko
Joined
Aug 21, 2005
Posts
361
...and now it's time for a little bit of C-5 hatin'....

"Crew, attention to the takeoff briefing. This will be a rolling, TRT,
military reject, unless we get airborne, in which case we'll declare an
emergency and start the "main gear failure to retract" checklist.

In case anyone does NOT see a safety of flight malfunction prior to
reaching "go" speed, shout "GO-GO-GO" loudly and enthusiastically, and
jump seat, you get on the radio and cancel the redball for jackstands.

In the likely event we have to abort the takeoff, we'll stop straight
ahead on the runway, egress the aircraft, and meet 200 feet off the
nose, where the copilot will enlist the help of the U.S. Census Bureau
to locate and count off the members of the crew, and possibly the
passengers if they have any time left.

Copilot, before raising the gear or actuating any switch or control,
ensure that TACC has been informed of our intentions and concurs with
all intended actions.

Flying time on this leg will be 5 hours with the gear up, or 8 hours
with the gear stuck down. If the destination weather goes below VFR,
we'll divert because AMC crews aren't allowed to fly the NDB approach
everyone else is flying there.

The forecast does call for severe clear icing on the climbout, but the
airman forecasting at the weather hub over a thousand miles away at
Scott says not to worry because the hail will probably knock the ice off
the wings anyway.

We'd plan on flying the same SID all the major airlines are using for
departure, but we didn't have two weeks advance notice to have the AMC
TERPS guys review it for us and get two-star approval to fly it. Instead
we'll get radar vectors that mirror the same SID we're not allowed to
fly, and depart with an enhanced sense of safety.

If there are no questions, that concludes the brief."
 
...and now it's time for a little bit of C-5 hatin'....

"Crew, attention to the takeoff briefing. This will be a rolling, TRT,
military reject, unless we get airborne, in which case we'll declare an
emergency and start the "main gear failure to retract" checklist.

In case anyone does NOT see a safety of flight malfunction prior to
reaching "go" speed, shout "GO-GO-GO" loudly and enthusiastically, and
jump seat, you get on the radio and cancel the redball for jackstands.

In the likely event we have to abort the takeoff, we'll stop straight
ahead on the runway, egress the aircraft, and meet 200 feet off the
nose, where the copilot will enlist the help of the U.S. Census Bureau
to locate and count off the members of the crew, and possibly the
passengers if they have any time left.

Copilot, before raising the gear or actuating any switch or control,
ensure that TACC has been informed of our intentions and concurs with
all intended actions.

Flying time on this leg will be 5 hours with the gear up, or 8 hours
with the gear stuck down. If the destination weather goes below VFR,
we'll divert because AMC crews aren't allowed to fly the NDB approach
everyone else is flying there.

The forecast does call for severe clear icing on the climbout, but the
airman forecasting at the weather hub over a thousand miles away at
Scott says not to worry because the hail will probably knock the ice off
the wings anyway.

We'd plan on flying the same SID all the major airlines are using for
departure, but we didn't have two weeks advance notice to have the AMC
TERPS guys review it for us and get two-star approval to fly it. Instead
we'll get radar vectors that mirror the same SID we're not allowed to
fly, and depart with an enhanced sense of safety.

If there are no questions, that concludes the brief."

Umm - what is the point here? That you guys talk way too much prior to take off?
 
Beautiful. Simply Beautiful.

If you see three C-5s on the ramp and two are on jacks, what's the problem?

They ran out of jacks.
 
Scrapdog skips every checklist known to mankind. Granted, fighter checklists take about 6.9 seconds to go through, but I'm pretty pretty sure Scrapdog skips them all.

As for you heavy guys.....checklists are stupid. :)
 
Before anyone freaks out, I'm actually one of the few fighter guys that actually does checklists.

I no-sh*t verbalize to my lone-idiot self in the cockpit everytime I throw the gear down "Handle down, 3 green, good hydraulics, speed brake out."

I got that from my UPT roommate. I no longer use the S/B in my jet, but it's a good habit.
 
Q: What's the max service ceiling of the C-5??
A: The height of the tail, plus the height of the jacks.
 
Magnum - the big question is do you leave the hot mike on so you don't feel alone? I'll admit I did for my frist few solo rides in tweets till my IP brought it up. As far as "heavy" checklists go - nw rumor is we're going to flows (that is until the next O-6 needs an OPR bullet and decides to "introduce" checklists as an enhancement to safety)
 
Otto77;1408573In the likely event we have to abort the takeoff said:
200 feet off the[/COLOR]
nose, where the copilot will enlist the help of the U.S. Census Bureau
to locate and count off the members of the crew, and possibly the
passengers if they have any time left.

I'd get further away than 200' from that POS.
 
Magnum - the big question is do you leave the hot mike on so you don't feel alone?

I don't think I can fly cold mic! Tried it a couple times, but I guess I like hearing myself breathe. Of course, you learn to be judicious in your comments lest you drop an F-bomb in your tape about the OG flying on your wing.
 
lest you drop an F-bomb in your tape about the OG flying on your wing

F**k 'im . . . .
 

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