Landing Flaps request
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Brace Brace Let's leave our credentials alone. because that or thickness of logbook alone does not necessarily ensure that somebody is correct. On the issue of SOP and individual practices I will give you an example. In airbus when you are given a heading or you want to turn you can set heading and pull to get in HDG mode or you can first pull to get in HDG mode(or check HDG on FMA) and and then set heading. I see people doing either way. But SOP wants you to pull first. Is it splitting hair?
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Centaurs
What are the occassions when gear is lowered first or raised risking speed excursions? I can think of only one, in EMER DES with damage gear is lowered to increase descent or having lowered raise it after level off. It's strictly an emergency procedure not even once in a life time event. Most pilots continue to retire without having ever done an EMER DES in real life or if you happen to meet one then he perhaps didn't need to lower the gear. So your example is not appropriate. As against this routinely, daily flap is the first thing to be lowered and exceedences do occur. Second why should copilot even check silently isn't Capt more experienced and is supposed to check that speed is appropriate? In the air humans have limitations and they forget so speed checked call is a forced reminder. If everybody did what they are supposed then we won't be discussing it. People have forgotten gear for entire flight, have raised flaps instead of gear, landed without gear, have lowered flaps high speed, have exceeded speed after lowering causing auto retraction. The list is endless. No caution is enough. It's better to be more than less.
After all you don't say "Speed checked" when the landing gear is selected up or down
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On some Boeings, the flap will trigger the GPWS Mode IV, and it won't be cancellable. As stated, depends if the flap is defined as a landing flap config.
On your question of Airbus HDG. I refrain from any technical answer. But from a psychological point of view, if the flying pilot on AP likes to preset the heading while the readback is done as a mental backup, I don't see any problem as the SOP is correctly handled. It's just that the heading bug is already preset. But then again, I don't know any technical background that would post a limitation on this behaviour. Because that is what you seem to imply, the SOP is related to a limitation of the autoflight system somehow.
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All over the world below 10000ft you have to 250kt. So what's the problem lowering gear? You don't need to check. About the Airbus heading, there's no system limitation but not following SOP of pulling HDG first and then setting has resulted in a fatal accident of AirBlue in Pakistan. Out of many things wrong they did dialling in NAV mode was the last straw. In a circling approach Capt was in panick in low clouds and rain. Trying to turn base on AP he dialed 90° left, seeing ac not turning dialled some more to go past 180° from present. Then realising he was in NAV mode (shouldn't have been to start with) letting go some expletives pulled to HDG mode. The aircraft turned shorter way to right to crash into a hill. Killing all 150 people on board. All of his 20000hrs thick logbook didn't save him. SOPs are not optional. Human propensity to err is virtually unlimited. Cockpit is hardly the place to be creative. QZ8501 trying to engineer a procedure at 35000ft all the zeros over 3 vanished 3.5mts and 130 people went to watery grave. Just Fly the way manufacturer wants you to fly unless there's no procedure. It happened in AB erroneous triggering of protection and air craft could not be prevented from a descent. Now crew was forced to do something and they put the aircraft in alternate law to disengage the protection. My hats off to them. There was one odd case of this but when they made it a possible procedure for such scenario there were dozen cases of wrong application when problem was something else. Doesn't help trying to be extra smart.
Last edited by vilas; 20th Feb 2021 at 09:50.
Did they change this software in later models?
On the OP question; there are rare occasions when ATC cut you in closer than you expected or asked you to keep the speed up, when I might ask: "Flap x as soon as you can", and we both understand that means when the speed has dropped suitably below Vfe next.
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THe call out for Pull HDG hasn't changed. I was trying to say it may appear there are two ways of doing a thing but only the one recommended by SOP must be followed. Below 10000ft gear can be lowered without much caution. I think B737 gear lowering speed is 270kt. If tighter vectoring You can always use speed brake, below VLO gear, below VFE first flap then put speed brake in, continue configuring all the way. There's still time to say speed checked. Actually more so because this is the time you may drop your guard.
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PF should check whether the conditions allow for configuration change, call for it, PM should check the same conditions, then action the change. Callouts or not.
Yes, absolutely. In those (rare) situations* I still monitored the speed and PM. It was when I was close to or rapidly approaching Vfe next, and I knew there was about to be a radio call so I would have had to speak over ATC or PM's reply, so I got my config request in just ahead of that. Not something we routinely had to do.
*At our home base; owing to airspace below and traffic, the ILS intercept could be close in and busy, and if you didn't act quick enough, you then had to intercept the glide from above.
*At our home base; owing to airspace below and traffic, the ILS intercept could be close in and busy, and if you didn't act quick enough, you then had to intercept the glide from above.
Last edited by Uplinker; 20th Feb 2021 at 13:28.
vilas
Again, you haven't read my post so what is the point of this discussion?
The gear limit always has to be checked before lowering/raising the gear every single time. If you train people to the standard "you don't need to check", I close my books and leave this discussion. If you read my post, it explains raising the gear after having descended with 250kts. There is a speed limit.
Your crash story: I don't understand your reasoning. Yes you have to adhere to the SOP. But you do realise the "no crash, no problem" idea?The underlying training issue here is still there: no APFD behaviour monitoring for whatever reason, not monitoring of the actual outcome. Any crash comes with SOP changes AND training. The SOP in itself is not the full cause, a change in SOP not the full cure and not the full protection. SOPs are a tool with different goals (crm is part of it yes), Autopilots are a tool, Flight Director is a tool, and all those tools help to reach a safe goal. But if you notice that goal is not being achieved, you act. SOPs are not bulletproof.
The supplementary procedure on a Boeing, where HDG SEL shows the exact same behaviour as on the Airbus, is to rotate the heading bug, then select HDG SEL. But it also says "VERIFY FMA". And then you verify the AP action. And it does not do what you want it to do? You disconnect and turn in manual flight. All Boeing procedure written down in the manuals. There is not a single SOP violation in this full paragraph for a system that functions identical.
Anyway, I'm out.
Again, you haven't read my post so what is the point of this discussion?
The gear limit always has to be checked before lowering/raising the gear every single time. If you train people to the standard "you don't need to check", I close my books and leave this discussion. If you read my post, it explains raising the gear after having descended with 250kts. There is a speed limit.
Your crash story: I don't understand your reasoning. Yes you have to adhere to the SOP. But you do realise the "no crash, no problem" idea?The underlying training issue here is still there: no APFD behaviour monitoring for whatever reason, not monitoring of the actual outcome. Any crash comes with SOP changes AND training. The SOP in itself is not the full cause, a change in SOP not the full cure and not the full protection. SOPs are a tool with different goals (crm is part of it yes), Autopilots are a tool, Flight Director is a tool, and all those tools help to reach a safe goal. But if you notice that goal is not being achieved, you act. SOPs are not bulletproof.
The supplementary procedure on a Boeing, where HDG SEL shows the exact same behaviour as on the Airbus, is to rotate the heading bug, then select HDG SEL. But it also says "VERIFY FMA". And then you verify the AP action. And it does not do what you want it to do? You disconnect and turn in manual flight. All Boeing procedure written down in the manuals. There is not a single SOP violation in this full paragraph for a system that functions identical.
Anyway, I'm out.
Last edited by BraceBrace; 21st Feb 2021 at 08:48.
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I can’t see a reason in a normal situation for a conditional request for a configuration change. I may have missed it, but I haven’t read anywhere where that is even a thing considered.
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On the OP question; there are rare occasions when ATC cut you in closer than you expected or asked you to keep the speed up, when I might ask: "Flap x as soon as you can", and we both understand that means when the speed has dropped suitably below Vfe next.
Check post #50?
You are misrepresenting what actually happened and maybe I haven't explained it very well, but I have a garage to paint, so I am not going into the whole thing now - you would have to have been there. My base manager was in the other seat and was perfectly happy with the situation.
As I've said, (twice); it was not normal
You are misrepresenting what actually happened and maybe I haven't explained it very well, but I have a garage to paint, so I am not going into the whole thing now - you would have to have been there. My base manager was in the other seat and was perfectly happy with the situation.
As I've said, (twice); it was not normal
Last edited by Uplinker; 22nd Feb 2021 at 13:45.
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Saying things like "speed checked" or avoiding actuating multiple hydraulic devices simultaneously, should be based on the company's SOP regardless of whether we find it superfluous. (Happily for me, neither is a part of my airline.)
But if a certain sequence of actions sets off a gear horn, then IMO airmanship requires we don't do that. At best, it's very annoying, and at worst, it conditions our brains to ignore it as a meaningless sound that falls to the background in normal ops, and therefore makes it likelier to ignore if we get a real gear horn with the gear up. (The cries wolf effect.)
Also, generally, the PF shouldn't call for actions before they can be done. It sets up the PM to forget by the time 10 or 20 seconds have rolled around and the conditions are met, and other distractions have gotten in the way. It's the PF being out of the loop, and unfairly burdening the PM. The PF should stay in the loop and call for the thing when he actually wants it. Don't have any more balls in the air than necessary.
Thirdly, it is very possible that for a combination of circumstances to render the strict following of SOP to be inappropriate, as it's impractical to write a manual that can consider every single possibility - and judgment should therefore be used. And the preface to my SOP chapter, says exactly this. However, all too often I see this used as cheap justification for being lazy, instead of actual good judgment.
But if a certain sequence of actions sets off a gear horn, then IMO airmanship requires we don't do that. At best, it's very annoying, and at worst, it conditions our brains to ignore it as a meaningless sound that falls to the background in normal ops, and therefore makes it likelier to ignore if we get a real gear horn with the gear up. (The cries wolf effect.)
Also, generally, the PF shouldn't call for actions before they can be done. It sets up the PM to forget by the time 10 or 20 seconds have rolled around and the conditions are met, and other distractions have gotten in the way. It's the PF being out of the loop, and unfairly burdening the PM. The PF should stay in the loop and call for the thing when he actually wants it. Don't have any more balls in the air than necessary.
Thirdly, it is very possible that for a combination of circumstances to render the strict following of SOP to be inappropriate, as it's impractical to write a manual that can consider every single possibility - and judgment should therefore be used. And the preface to my SOP chapter, says exactly this. However, all too often I see this used as cheap justification for being lazy, instead of actual good judgment.