Pre Takeoff Checklists
On Mar 23, 9:37*pm, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Mar 23, 9:01*am, Nine Bravo Ground wrote:
On Mar 23, 7:48*am, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:31*am, Grider Pirate wrote:
On Mar 23, 7:24*am, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Mar 23, 8:20*am, Tony wrote:
Seems to me that it's been a while since we had a good brouhaha over
pretakeoff checklists. *Most of use use either ABBCCCDDE (or is it
AABBCCDDE? Or ABBBCCCCDDEEFG?) or CBSIFTCB or some other variant. *I'm
curious what you use and WHY? *What have you added or subtracted to
the "base" checklist to fit your specific glider or operation, or to
prevent problems you have encountered.
I personally use CBSIFTCB in all the gliders I fly. After that is
complete I'm OK hooking up the rope, then I review WET (Wind,
Emergency, Traffic) and give the signal to launch.
Ditto the checklist you use, mostly due to law of primacy.
Frank Whiteley
I don't know CBSIFTCB. *I use
A ltimiter
B elts
B allast
C ontrols
C anopy
C able
D ivebrakes
D irection (wind)
E mergency plan
.. and for landing:
F laps
U ndercarriage
S peed
T rim
A irbrakes
L ook
L and
C ontrols
B allast
S traps
I nstruments
F laps
T rim
C anopy
B rakes
W ater
U ndercarriage
L loose items
F laps
S peed
T rim
A irbrakes
L ook
L and
as the eventual migration from USTALL in the late '70's. *Some of the
liturgy of soaring.
Does "Land" mean anything beyond the obvious?
9B
IIRC, in the original USTALL I learned in 1977 the second L (modified
in later club checks) was 'Look again', which is good advice.
I use "BUFSTALL".
Ballast: (Dump takes up to 10 minutes so it's first - "S" turn while
looking back or check shadow to make sure water is going overboard.)
Undercarriage: (Approaching and circling field with gear down lets
people know I want to land - I have two gear warning systems for
backup.)
Flaps: (Set as appropriate or think about when and where to set them,
i.e. go to full flaps on short final),
Speed(s): (Select two speeds for conditions: a faster pattern speed
and a slower, yellow triangle "over-the-fence" speed.)
Trim-set:
Air brakes-check: (I've found them frozen on several occasions and
once only one side opened.)
Look: (Final check for traffic on the ground and in the air, select
aim, touchdown and stopping points which will be very different if "A"
didn't work.)
Land. The final L for Land isn't redundant. It's a reminder the
checklist is complete and it's time to focus 100% of my attention to
making a safe, accurate landing.
There's a 1000 other things that could be discussed for inclusion such
as radio calls. I think a "landing checklist" should be as short as
possible while covering the basic items. "Basic" in the sense that
it'll be expensive and/or I'll look stupid if they're overlooked.
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