volunteer
Saturdays in the fall.
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2005
- Posts
- 74
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volunteer said:Part 91 Checklists
Part 91 checklists do not have to be approved like 135 and 121 checklists. Just make sure they at least cover everything in the AFM and you'll be good to go.volunteer said:I am in the process of re-writing our checklist. I could not find anything in the CFR's that specifies any requirements for checklists in the Part 91 world. Does anyone know of any specifics that are required to be included on checklists and/or the CFR where I can find them? Thanks!
volunteer said:I am in the process of re-writing our checklist. I could not find anything in the CFR's that specifies any requirements for checklists in the Part 91 world. Does anyone know of any specifics that are required to be included on checklists and/or the CFR where I can find them? Thanks!
Personal or organizational checklists usually account for local perferred operating procedures or known problem areas that are not necessarily covered by some general checklist writer.KigAir said:Why not use a ready made checklist? They only cost a few bucks and are very comprehensive.
pilotyip said:When you build a checklist, make it a check list not a to do list.
minitour said:Can I get an "AMEN!". Nothing scares me more while instructing than a student, head down, doing a "before landing checklist" on short final.
midlifeflyer said:...put the throttle full forward...
minitour said:haha...funny this should come up...I've got a few students that neglect this part of the checklist. My favorite line has become, "Are we going to use full power or do you want to use all 8,000' today?".
-mini
100LL... Again! said:Sometimes the culprit is a nerdy CFI who is in LOVE with the idea of airline-style operations and makes a monster checklist that ends up generating .4 of taxi time minimum.
Good advice.100LL... Again! said:The problem with most GA checklists is that they are more of a "How to fly the 172 for Dummies" than they are a true checklist.
One of our instructors once made a light twin checklist longer than flighsafety's King Air checklist. It was unbearable.
Checklists need to contain items that will kill you or damage the aircraft, and anything else that improves operational efficiency, without cluttering the above two items.
If you put too many items on a checklist, people will tend to miss the important ones or get halfway done, drop the gear and forget to finish the rest.
Sometimes the culprit is a nerdy CFI who is in LOVE with the idea of airline-style operations and makes a monster checklist that ends up generating .4 of taxi time minimum.
NEVER put airmanship items on a checklist. For example: Brakes - apply.
or: When landing is assured - power to idle.
If you need a checklists to tell you that, you don't need a checklist, you need dual.
Gutenberg said:BE-58 POH recommends not cracking the boots until 1/2 to 3/4" of ice is on the surfaces. Bridging is like global warming- no proof, and the FEDs agree.
Gutenberg said:There is an advisory circular that explicitly talks about studies on bridging and pneumatic de-ice boots and it recommends to crack em if you got em. My POI at the Great Lakes FSDO asked me about it on my initial PIC ride and I gave him the "bridging is a myth" answer, went over well with him.
Sorry for not linking to the AC, but I'm lazy.
phantomdriver said:mattpilot it sound like you were at airman flight school.
phantomdriver said:mattpilot it sound like you were at airman flight school.
91.503(b) compels certain contents of that checklist as follows:(a) The pilot in command of an airplane shall ensure that the following flying equipment and aeronautical charts and data, in current and appropriate form, are accessible for each flight at the pilot station of the airplane:
(2) A cockpit checklist containing the procedures required by paragraph (b) of this section.
91.605(b) compels compliance with the flight manual as follows:(b) Each cockpit checklist must contain the following procedures and shall be used by the flight crewmembers when operating the airplane:
(1) Before starting engines.
(2) Before takeoff.
(3) Cruise.
(4) Before landing.
(5) After landing.
(6) Stopping engines.
(7) Emergencies.
This is generally regarded to mean that at a minimum, the procedures contained in the AFM must be included in any checklist used to comply with 91.503(a)(2). Doing otherwise could be construed as operating contrary to the AFM.(b) No person may operate a turbine-engine-powered transport category airplane certificated after September 30, 1958, contrary to the Airplane Flight Manual …
This last part is also true with all aircraft. 91.503 checklist requirements aside, although we tend to think of "limitations" in a different way, there is NTSB case law finding a violation of 91.9(a) for failure to complete a checklist item.Dumbledore said:Doing otherwise could be construed as operating contrary to the AFM.