Monday, July 24, 2023

Troubleshooting By Selfie

Dear Pilot,

While it is excellent that you communicate with company when you have in flight issues, please note that you have a commercial licence and something like 2000 hours of experience. Consider the fact that Captain Sullenberger and crew do not have any photographs of their landing in the Hudson River, and did not text their dispatcher for help. When they experienced a problem, they used their knowledge of the aircraft systems and their checklists to manage the problem. If you have time to take photos, you have time to pull out the checklist.

The reason we spent hours in groundschool learning how our electrical system, flaps and gear work is so that when something goes wrong you are immediately cognizant of what it could be, what systems will still be reliable and which are not. Also when maintenance pulls the data recorder, we can see exactly when the affected system failed, so when I ask you when it failed, I'm actually asking you how long it took for you to notice, so it's a good idea not to lie about it.

We will speak more.

- Aviatrix

Dear Diehard Remaining Readers,

My abject apologies that the few times I blog these days are exasperated diatribes at job applicants and pilots.  I don't get to fly the airplanes very much anymore, and when I do, any adventures I have immediately result in paperwork that is my problem, leaving me without time or inclination to write about them again in a more amusing way.

I complain about pilots not learning things, but I have to face the fact that I myself persist in not learning that I cannot expect a pilot with a commercial pilot licence to possess the knowledge taught in commercial groundschool, nor the knowledge taught in our own annual groundschool. This is especially depressing because it is my job to develop curriculum, teach and assess this learning.  So when I learn that a pilot cannot identify the cockpit indication that his ammeters are online, it is on me.  No tragedy occurred, but imagine if it had, and I was left with text messages that suggested I had not done my duty as a trainer.

I still 'think in blog' sometimes, making poor situations better because I'm imagining interesting blog entries, and I even take photos sometimes, thinking I will blog them. Like this one from a hotel.




I did not think to go to the front desk and ask for details of the unregistered guests. I will just imagine a bear wandered in and started pushing buttons on the lobby pop machine.

love,
Aviatrix

6 comments:

Andrew said...

Thank you for still thinking of us!

No apology needed, you don't owe us anything. I happily follow many previously-prolific bloggers in the hope that they'll find time to write again, and the computer tells me if any of you do :).

mark.medic said...

Always a good day when you post!

TgardnerH said...

The great thing about blog readers is that I don't have to actively check, and instead when you post we just get a fun surprise!
I miss your regular posts, but even more am glad you continue to live your life well.

sean said...

The larger issue for the hotel is that the wildlife don't know to be clear of the prop.

Good to hear you're doing well :)

John Lennerton said...

Thanks for checking in!

My first thoughts in seeing the picture of the hotel door: a gang of raccoons terrorizing the guests and raiding the minibars.

Dave said...

Thanks, still checking in now and then for old skool blog moments like this!