av8tor4239
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2004
- Posts
- 768
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bravodude,
What business does a ramper have in the jumpseat during a flight.. Why does the ramper need to know how the procedures in the memo are done. There are ways to teach the rampers what they need to know to complete their duties without putting them in the jumpseat (simulators, pushback in grounded airplanes, classroom etc)
Senerio:
Thunderstom, night, moderate turbulence, full load of PAX, 13th hour of being on duty, last turn of a 4 day trip, approach to CAT 1 minimums, you are about 50 miles out and the engine catches fire. You run your checklist and are setting up for the approach.. Over the marker you are being pelted by HEAVY rain.... you drop the gear and the Ramper in the Jumpseat SCREAMS what was that and begins to cry out of fear for his/her life...... Then just as you are getting ready to kick of the auto-pilot, the ramper VOMITS all over the controls, all over you, and all over instruments... PROJECTILE VOMIT.... you execute missed approach because the distraction from the chunks of the Quiznos sub on your PFD caused you to go full deflection off the localizer... Now you are flying right into a blotch of red orange crap on the radar screen.. but you second guess yourself becasuse that red orange blotch might actually be part of the half digested tomato from the rampers puke stuck to your MFD....
Get the picture?
While I agree the jumpseat is a pilot privelege (with the occasional Fred the Fed).
Reading over your scenario, seems to me you are a glass half empty kind of fellow. Yeah all that could happen, BUT I could also fall down the stairs walking to my car or get electrocuted vacuuming the house.
Senerio:
Thunderstom, night, moderate turbulence, full load of PAX, 13th hour of being on duty, last turn of a 4 day trip, approach to CAT 1 minimums, you are about 50 miles out and the engine catches fire. You run your checklist and are setting up for the approach.. Over the marker you are being pelted by HEAVY rain.... you drop the gear and the Ramper in the Jumpseat SCREAMS what was that and begins to cry out of fear for his/her life...... Then just as you are getting ready to kick of the auto-pilot, the ramper VOMITS all over the controls, all over you, and all over instruments... PROJECTILE VOMIT.... you execute missed approach because the distraction from the chunks of the Quiznos sub on your PFD caused you to go full deflection off the localizer... Now you are flying right into a blotch of red orange crap on the radar screen.. but you second guess yourself becasuse that red orange blotch might actually be part of the half digested tomato from the rampers puke stuck to your MFD....
Get the picture?
bravodude,
What business does a ramper have in the jumpseat during a flight.. Why does the ramper need to know how the procedures in the memo are done. There are ways to teach the rampers what they need to know to complete their duties without putting them in the jumpseat (simulators, pushback in grounded airplanes, classroom etc)
Senerio:
Thunderstom, night, moderate turbulence, full load of PAX, 13th hour of being on duty, last turn of a 4 day trip, approach to CAT 1 minimums, you are about 50 miles out and the engine catches fire. You run your checklist and are setting up for the approach.. Over the marker you are being pelted by HEAVY rain.... you drop the gear and the Ramper in the Jumpseat SCREAMS what was that and begins to cry out of fear for his/her life...... Then just as you are getting ready to kick of the auto-pilot, the ramper VOMITS all over the controls, all over you, and all over instruments... PROJECTILE VOMIT.... you execute missed approach because the distraction from the chunks of the Quiznos sub on your PFD caused you to go full deflection off the localizer... Now you are flying right into a blotch of red orange crap on the radar screen.. but you second guess yourself becasuse that red orange blotch might actually be part of the half digested tomato from the rampers puke stuck to your MFD....
Get the picture?
Where's the fire?
I welcome my fellow employees into the cockpit! The more they understand about the tempo of our jobs and the myriad of decisions compressed into short periods...the better for us!
A 60-second brief on staying quiet and out-of-the-way should do the trick. If it motiviates them and leads to more appreciation of our jobs, I'm all for it.
I think it also enhances the big picture that helps employees define their role in the airline "ballet". A ramper seeing how difficult it is to see the wingtips during taxi-in might take his wing-walker job a little more seriously. A tug driver feeling the jerky play in the tow bar when the guy pushing you back isn't smooth might spread the word...or make him focus on being smooth himself. Shoot, I'd be happy if they just witnessed the hassle of getting through Metering and Ground during a hectic hub push! Then they'll understand we're not intentionally trying to induce hypothermia by making them wait while we get a push clearance!
Where's the downside here?
Cockpit's not a temple man...
D1
That jumpseat belongs to the the company you fly for. With the proper management signiture anyone can sit there who works for your company. TSA has nothing to do with it. Of course I may be reverting back pre-9/11.
Desert....My thought process is this...it's a lot easier to get a job as a ramper than a mechanic or pilot. You don't have to go through any schooling to be qualified. In any case, the more people you give cockpit access to, the more accessible the cockpit is to terrorists. I could care less who gets to sit up front before 9-11.
I wouldn't have a problem with this except that it's AFTER 9/11.
I don't think this person should have posted this on a public forum......let's just give the terrorists more ideas. Get my drift?
I'm sure the terrorists are surfing flightinfo to get ideas on attacks. Get real.
I'm sure the terrorists are surfing flightinfo to get ideas on attacks. Get real.