Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Babysitting the airplane

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
Do you think you acting like the classic Corndog Kernel might have anything to do with you "flying with more and more of these guys"?.

:rolleyes:

Nope. :rolleyes:
 
It affects you every day and on every turn.

What if you had a twenty minute turn. You wanted to use a real, porcelain potty and the Captain wanted to go buy Auntie Anne's pretzels for the crew. Right now you have to rush your business (assuming he lets you go first) so that you get back in time for him to run upstairs. If they would eliminate this policy, once the airplane was on ground power with the APU shut down you could both bail out as soon as the parking checklist was done, divide and conquer.

It's really an efficiency issue as much as anything else. We can be more productive with our limited time if we aren't chained to the airplane for no reason.

Here's another example. You are headed to Denver with a planned 60 minutes for an airplane swap. You think you'll have plenty of time to grab some lunch, use the restroom, and maybe even run up to the lounge to grab the latest CQT study guide. Instead after landing and shutting down you find out that the inbound crew isn't due in for :30 minutes and since there are through passengers we are required to stay with the plane. One of the pilots is going to be stuck babysitting while the other reaps the benefits of a break in the action.

You're right, it's a tiny thing just like gear pins are a tiny thing. But eliminating a policy that has no real bearing on safety would improve the at-work quality of life of the crews and specifically of the first officers.

I suspect it doesn't mean much to those who are working for their first and only airline - they don't know any better. (And some are conditioned to follow orders by decades of service) but for those who have experienced life under other liveries it is a more difficult pill to swallow.


Do not try to inject a logic-filled syringe into a flight info thread.
Especially a SW thread, jeez
 
Last edited:
Gear pins are just plane stupid. I can see, but don't necessarily agree, the fact that some idiot could accidentally knock out the ground power (I've had it happen), but have you ever seen a 737 spontaneously go gear up on the ramp?

In the event that the GPU falls offline, I believe there is an alarm that sounds to alert the ramp crew.

Then again, it could be the drugs.
 
In the event that the GPU falls offline, I believe there is an alarm that sounds to alert the ramp crew.

It does, it's the IRS' going into toxic shock. I wouldn't expect anyone to come running.
 
So when the ground power unit goes ape sht, as it often does, the gear is supposed to retract?

Gear pins are a waste of time.
 
I'm in disbelief that anyone would argue for "babysitting" the aircraft. What if we both need to use the big boy rest room? I guess I'll just blow up the forward lav while boarding....we will never get the contract many at SW want when guys can't even change their thinking on something as stupid as baby sitting a modern jet. Pathetic
 
Don't sugarcoat there tanker head..

I disagree with the policy too but I also know that change is hard especially for adults and especially when they have never known anything else. So for those for whom SW is their first airline, they may not know anything else and may not understand why it is a big deal. I don't think that makes them morons. I just think we can help them to see that it is industry standard and not unsafe to change from the status quo.

For better or for worse it is an airline built on a tribal culture of doing thing their own way. It isn't going to change - even on the little things - without a fight. But it IS changing. The latest email from CD said the gear pin requirement would likely be gone later this spring.

These kind of things are low hanging fruit and I believe worth pursuing.
 
Maybe this conversation should be moved to the Swapa forum though. It's not broad enough to warrant being out here where everyone can see the dirty laundry.
 
I'm in disbelief that anyone would argue for "babysitting" the aircraft.

I don't think anyone IS arguing FOR the policy, it's just odd watching people get all wrapped up over a procedure that only affects most pilots a few times a year. I wish they would get rid of it, I always have, it just doesn't seem like a major issue to me. The only times it irritates me is when we swap, otherwise I'm not getting enraged over having one pilot staying onboard. If the F/O wants to go, then he goes, I'm not stopping anyone. It never was a problem when we did :20 turns since we were pretty much just stop and go. The problem is the Captains who disappear for 30 minutes of the 35 minute turn, I've seen that, you just have to confront that ahead of time.

What if we both need to use the big boy rest room?

The problem with flying AM's when you're over 40 years old. Most PM'ers don't blow a colon after 1PM.

....we will never get the contract many at SW want when guys can't even change their thinking on something as stupid as baby sitting a modern jet. Pathetic

Or focus all their energy on the wrong things. Ask around about the Peanut Butter Jar principal.
 

Latest resources

Back
Top