falconpilot
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 5, 2004
- Posts
- 223
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Uhh...I think I'll save that stuff for the sim and hope it is realistic enough to give me an idea of how the airplane will handle. Not sure if it is good advice to be telling everyone to do an aborted t/o at v1. Of course, it's probably even dumber to actually follow that advice. Maybe next time I can start an inflight fire in the cabin so I know exactly how smokey it's gonna get in that there plane. It could save my a$$ one day.SAMRA said:As a side note. I think everyone of you should do an aborted takeoff just prior to your descion speed.
Cheers.
4 engine C-130, two engines out, two operating on the same wing. 120,000 lbs. Dumping fuel like you read about.SAMRA said:I'll bet you have never landed off of a paved runway before. I'm also willing to strech that out and say you've never had to actually deal with somthing that require imediate attention. So until you come to that point, keep your mouth shut.
Now...when you have an actual emergency you expect me to remember all that. Noooo. It always amazes me how many people over-brief.Flying Illini said:Take-off briefing:
DA-10/DA-20:
Departing rwy XX, runway is clear and dry (uncontaminated), field elevation is XXXX, temperature is XXXX, runway length is XXXX, runway required is XXXX. Route is (insert "SID briefing" or "Direct to" or "as filed"), Initial altitude is XXXX. We will abort for anything (depending upon runway length we may use 80 kts or V1 as primary abort speed, I'll use 80kts in this example) prior to 80 kts, after 80 kts we will abort for the "big-5":, engine failure, engine fire, thrust reverser deployment, loss of directional control, or uncommanded pitch trim. After V1 we will take any problem airborn and treat it as an in-flight emergency. We will climb V2 to XXXX altitude before addressing the problem. We will return to this airport (or go to XXX airport). This will be my leg from the right seat (in my case) using standard callouts. Any questions, comments, or concerns?
No I don't expect you to remember all of that. A lot of it is just informative in nature i.e., Runway length is XXXX, runway required is XXXX. What is expected to be remembered is if an emergency occurs before V1, that we abort, if one occurs after V1, we're flying. Speeds are a good thing to remember and they're bugged in case you forget V2, initial altitude (which varies depending upon terrain) is good to remember since initial assigned altitude (set in the alerter) doesn't always match the briefed altitude that you will go to to deal with a problem. I guess when reading it (and when I was typing it) it seems like alot to brief, but you have it memorized and you know what the really important stuff is. It takes you 15-20 seconds to brief.Thedude said:Now...when you have an actual emergency you expect me to remember all that. Noooo. It always amazes me how many people over-brief.
No worries....If you fly with SAMRA you'll get all the experience you need. You'll be so experienced that you'll be able to fix a hermon nelson at -35.Thedude said:Now...when you have an actual emergency you expect me to remember all that.
Just my opinion, but I have never seen the PF call the abort. The way we do it is: The pilot flying(PF) is looking outside and aborts for loss of directional control. The Pilot not flying(PNF) makes all the calls since he is looking inside the cockpit. If he sees anything abnormal he calls abort. We try to stay away from interpreting lights and buzzers and whether or not to abort. This can cause some problems. You don't have time on the takeoff roll to have the PNF report a light or malfunction and the PF make a judgement on whether or not to abort. By that time you're already through V1 and trying to stop it could cause problems. We just abort for anything below V1 and fly for anything after V1. It makes things real simple. And if you've done your calculations correctly you have nothing to worry about. On a side note, I used to fly with a guy who would abort after V1 if there was enough runway(in his opinion). Very dangerous!, and eventually someone will get hurt doing that.fokkers&beer said:....the captain will call the abort, but everybody needs to call any lights or malifunctions.