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This one should be interesting. I hear all kinds of stories of captains (or FO's) that like to make up their own procedures and have these (at least in their mind) rationalizations for making up their own procedures. Anyone?
This could have been an entertaining thread, but now it's just stupid.
Professionals don't change the way they operate with a Fed on board....
The mask rule is in part to TUC but also work load. If one doesn't have the mask on and there is a Rapid Decompression, searching for the mask, and putting it on is time away from controlling the jet.
Pilots who don't wear the mask while the other takes a LAV break are UNprofessional....
The FAA has a program so that CIV pilots can visit MIL altitude chambers. It cost a day off and some $$$, but being professional is about service and a little sacrifice..
http://www.faa.gov/pilots/training/airman_education/aerospace_physiology/
Pilots who don't wear the mask while the other takes a LAV break are UNprofessional....
Just call me "UNprofessional" then.
On August 16, 1987, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82 operating as Northwest Airlines Flight 255,[38] bound for Phoenix, Arizona, and Santa Ana, California, crashed on take-off from Metro's 8,500-foot (2,600 m)-long Runway 3 Center (Now Runway 3L). All but one passenger on the aircraft were killed; the lone survivor was a young girl, Cecelia Cichan, who lost both of her parents and her brother. The NTSB determined that the accident resulted from flight crew's failure to deploy the aircraft's flaps prior to take-off, resulting in a lack of necessary lift. The aircraft slammed into an overpass bridge on Interstate 94 just northeast of the departure end of the runway.
As Paul Harvey might say, now you know the rest of the story.
DC
Actually I like to know more about the CA's attitude.
Any links?
Interesting that many will put ego before people's lives, even their own...
And in aviation organizations, how the leadership and management will over look such attitudes....