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Playing the Game: An Insider's Guide to Successful Airline Simulator Training
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The following section was written by Captain Kurt Selbert, a former coworker of mine. The information presented here is an excellent, down to earth, straight forward approach to successfully completing an airline style training course. It has been published in the Airline Pilot magazine, and is reprinted with permission from Captain Selbert.
Captain Selbert is a Citation X captain for XOJet. He has previously held positions with West Air, Independence Air, and Atlantic Coast Airlines, as both a line pilot and in various airline training departments as a simulator instructor and check airman. He holds multiple type ratings, including the Citation X, Airbus A319/320/321, Bombardier Canadair Regional Jet, British Aerospace Jetstream 3200, British Aerospace Jetstream 4100, Embraer EMB-120 Brasilia, and Embraer EMB-110 Bandierante.
This is a longer read, but definitely worth it for anybody that is about to begin a simulator training program! |
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Playing
the Game Your
guide to successful completion of airline simulator training
By Captain Kurt R. Selbert Independence Air Reprinted
with permission. INTRODUCTION Why
do we do this to ourselves? What could possibly possess someone to
willfully enter the world of the training department? Why do we put our
jobs, our reputations, and our self-esteem at risk? Is it for status?
Money? Personal growth? Why? The
answer is probably different for each individual. We desire a bigger
paycheck or a change in scenery, or a change in job description. We put
our lives on hold for two to three months and spend 12 – 16 hours a
day immersed in books, manuals, checklists, procedures trainers and
simulators. Usually we come out ahead, having mastered the new aircraft
and emerge looking forward to a few years of peaceful line flying,
interrupted only by the requisite recurrent trip back to "the
box." Every
once in a while however, even the best of us stumble. The result is the dreaded
Pink Slip. Was it your fault? Maybe, and then again, maybe not.
Regardless, the personnel in the training department are rarely
compassionate or understanding of your reasoning and excuses. After all,
they have their type rating! If only somewhere along the line you’d
been given a few tools with which to prepare yourself for a training
event. Well, here are some for you. After
spending the last thirteen years flying for the same airline, having
spent years in the training department as an instructor and check
airman, and after having successfully added five type ratings to my
ticket, I finally get the strong feeling that I "get it". It’s
a game, pure and simple, a matching of wits, a battle of man over
machine. I’ve
seen many pilots go through training. Most emerge successfully, but more
than a few bright, sharp, skilled, talented pilots do not. While there
are pilots out there that really should have picked a different
profession, far too many training event failures are the result of but a
few simple, fixable problems. So
hear me and reflect. The light bulb has been turned on and your future
looks bright. Allow me to share with you my observations about what we
call the Training Event. ATTITUDE It's
all about attitude! Having the proper attitude is probably one of the
most important things when you approach a training event. Of course
a positive attitude is better than a negative one, but there’s
more to it than just that. Approach the new airplane with your hat
in your hands and a humble look on your face. In other words, check your
ego at the door. I know that’s hard for pilots because we have chosen
a profession that not everyone can do and it takes a certain type of
person with certain skills to master an aircraft. But swallow your pride
and remember that no one was born an expert. It
doesn’t matter what aircraft you’ve flown previously, what company
you were with, or what type of aviation you were previously involved
with. When it comes time to start learning a new aircraft, we all start
at ground zero again. Your background and skills will aid you for sure,
but just because you recently were flying the Techno-Wizard 9000 for
Yeager Airways doesn’t mean you’ll be able to breeze through
training on a new piece of equipment. Attitude
is everything. Listen to the instructors who teach you and ask them
questions. Remember, they already know how to fly the airplane and young
or old, junior or senior, current or not, they are the ones who will be
teaching you and they were chosen for that job because they know what
they’re doing. If you become a thorn in their side because of a bad
attitude, don’t expect their undivided attention when you need
assistance. It just might not be there for you. GROUND
SCHOOL First
things first. You have to attend ground school. You need to be told how
the company operates, how to figure alternates, when you can turn off
the "fasten seatbelt" sign, and how many passengers you can
take when it’s 95 degrees outside. That’s the easy part. Oh yeah,
you also have to know all the airplane’s procedures and systems too:
wingspan, max takeoff weight, how many generators, how to run the
pressurization how to program the FMS and so on. Maybe
this is your first airline training event. Maybe you don’t know what
you’re in store for. Or maybe you’re the grizzled old veteran who
has been there and done that many, many times. Either way, chances are,
you’re a bit apprehensive. The
best thing you can do for yourself, is to study in advance. Assuming you
don’t get thrown to the wolves, er, I mean sent to training with no
notice, you probably will have several weeks or even more with which to
spend countless hours pawing through the books. Important things to read
are the Operations Manual, the Flight Standards Manual,
the FAR/AIM, the Aircraft’s systems books, and last but not
least, the Jeppesen Charts, over which all of us could use a little
review I’m sure. If
management won't give you the systems book or the Airplane Flight
Standards Manual, pressure them, borrow a copy from another
pilot, beg, plead, cry- do whatever it takes. But get the books.
Study. Prepare. Learn. Show up for the first day of class knowing at least
the following - Limitations, Memory Items, and Profiles. A
brief word about memory items. If you are lucky enough to be training
for an airplane which utilizes something called a QRC (quick
reference checklist), then you will have few or no memory items to
learn. Studies have shown that relying on your memory in an emergency
situation, while quick, lacks accuracy. When all the emergency
checklists are printed out on one page and placed in the aircraft
within easy reach of the pilots, checklist accuracy increases
dramatically. The only thing that is affected is the speed at which
the checklist is performed. That is not necessarily a bad thing. More on
checklist speed later. As
a side comment, ever wonder why we are required to pick up a checklist
six times a day to perform a two item landing check and yet are required
to memorize 25 different memory items, each with four to eight items for
instant regurgitation that if you’re lucky you will have to perform or
recite maybe once a year? Kinda makes you go, Hmmmmmm…. To
study memory items, most people use a stack of 3 x 5 cards. They write
down the name of the checklist on one side and then each operation of
the checklist on the other. They spend hours holding a card against
their chest, looking at the ceiling and saying, "affected fire
switch push, affected thrust lever idle and confirm, affected thrust
lever confirm and shutoff" etc… This is the way it’s done. It
seems tedious, which it is, and overwhelming, which it’s not. You’ll
be surprised how little time it takes to place all the memory items in
your head well enough so that you can regurgitate them on command.
However, here’s a little advice: Practice
the memory items while doing something else. Since
the time a memory item will be used is a time of emergency, urgency, and
excitement, what normally happens is that we find ourselves so caught up
in the fact that the red engine fire light on the glareshield in front
of us is ON, that we forget what we’re supposed to do about it.
Practice reciting the memory items while watching TV, while driving your
car, or while walking through the park (not out loud in public, people
will stare). If you can recite a long complex memory item with lightning
speed while say, watching "Baywatch", then you should be able
to handle doing so in the simulator. Prior
to ground school you should know all sections of the Ops Manual
and pertinent FARs. Since much of the ground school will be spent
on these subjects, it will be to your benefit to know as much as
possible beforehand. Think you already know these subjects? Been tested
on them for years? Study anyway. You’ll be surprised how much you
don’t remember. As
you spend your time in class, make sure you fully understand everything
that is being covered. Nothing is worse than showing up at the oral and
not know some vital aspect of say, the aircraft’s weight and
balance procedures. If
you don’t understand something, ask. Instructors are there to teach
you whether they believe that to be the case or not. Most of them do,
some of them don’t. Some ground instructors only go through the
motions, while some actually put their heart into the class and want you
not only to learn, but to enjoy it in the process. If you get one of the
latter, you’re in luck. If you get the former, well, I hope you like
reading on your own. Regardless
of what kind of instructor happens to be teaching your class, it is your
responsibility to ensure that you know the material. Remember, this is
not Spoon Feeding 101. If you have questions, ask the instructor, or
another instructor. Ask pilots who fly the airplane, or other members of
the class. Remember, the only stupid questions are those that aren’t
asked. Remember
that the end result of ground school must be the successful completion
of the oral exam. Over-prepare yourself for this and don’t simply hope
that the examiner won’t ask a question in an area you are weak on. Be
prepared! As
you get closer and closer to the oral, it is natural to wonder what will
be asked. Do your homework. Talk to others who have been through
training to see what they were asked. All orals have some common subject
areas. Memory Items, Limitations, Performance and Weight and
Balance, 121 regulations, and of course, Aircraft Systems. Search
around for that list or lists of oral questions that floats around every
airline. Some enterprising individual before you has put together a list
of hundreds of previously asked questions and that list is undoubtedly
available if you look for it. Don’t assume those are the only
questions that will be asked, but they will give you a good idea as to
the scope and depth of the material you need to learn. Along
with the oral question lists you’ll undoubtedly find a plethora of
"cheat sheets" that people have put together to aid themselves
in the learning process. Thanks to the advent of the personal computer,
every pilot it seems has become a publishing wizard, eager to provide
question cards, cheat sheets and other study aids to his fellow pilots.
I suppose I’m no exception since I’m writing this for the same
purpose. Regardless,
take all cheat sheets with a grain of salt. The only truly accurate information
(supposedly anyway) comes from the official documents of the airline and
the FAA. What ever you do, don’t for example ignore the Limitations
section of the Flight Standards Manual and study only off of some
stranger’s cheat sheet. Not only may the numbers you learn be flat out
wrong, but outdated, and incomplete as well. A word to the wise is
sufficient. With
any luck, your airline’s training department has realistic
expectations of you and doesn’t turn the oral into a cruel game of
aviation "Trivial Pursuit" with each pilot. Hopefully, the
days of asking, "What is the tire pressure of the nosewheel
tire?" or, "How many watts is the taxi light?" are over.
Remember, there’s need to know, nice to know, and trivia. Hopefully
you will be asked little trivia. When
it comes time to take the oral, don’t fall into one of two dangerous
traps: First,
don’t nominate yourself for the "Golden Shovel Award". In
other words, don’t keep babbling on and on when answering a question.
You may say something incorrect which will cause the examiner’s
eyebrow to be raised and more probing questions to be asked. Don’t dig
yourself a hole in the ground when answering a question. Answer it with
a short but complete answer. Don’t offer opinions, or speculate on the
intent of a policy, or say what you’d "really" do. Just say
the right thing and stop. Don’t give the examiner any reason to probe
the question further. On
the other hand, don’t answer every question with a short, one-word
answer. If the examiner has to ask four questions just to find the
answer to the first one, chances are he’ll get irritated and start
finding harder and harder questions to ask. Don’t ask me how I know
this one. Just trust me. No
oral would be complete without a few questions that you just don’t
know the answer to. You are playing a game with the examiner and he has
to prove to you somehow that he (or she) is the "man". Expect
a few questions that you can’t answer. With some examiners, they’ll
keep asking you questions until they find something you don’t know.
Why? Because they want to feel like they’ve taught you something. Let
them. Don’t argue with an examiner! When
you do come to a question that you don’t know the answer to, don’t
try to BS your way through it. Most examiners will allow you to use the
books and references that you’d normally have with you when on the
line to look up answers if you need to. If told that this is acceptable,
don’t hesitate to look things up. No one, unless they are in
possession of a photographic memory, can remember everything. If
you do plan on looking up an answer, make sure you know where to find
it! Few thing are more irritating when giving an oral than having the
student take 20 minutes trying to find the answer to a question. If you
don’t know the answer and don’t know where to find it, say so.
Examiners would much rather hear "I don’t know" than have
their time and yours wasted by fruitless searching through your manuals. On
the flip side of that, don’t look up the answer to every question. The
examiner has to see that you know something! TRAINING
PARTNER SELECTION If
you are lucky enough to be employed by an airline that allows you to
choose your training partner, you must at some point look around your
cadre of classmates and start lining up suitable candidates. The
selection of training partners however is rarely done like this.
Usually, it falls to the seniority system to make the choice for you.
Regardless of how it is done, this is one of the most important factors
in your training. A good partner can make a tough airplane seem like a
breeze while a weak partner can turn a simple airplane into a
single-pilot nightmare. Regardless
of whom you get as a partner, you will find that you have just entered
into a month or two long relationship with this person. You will find
out about their childhood, their home life, their eating and sleeping
habits, and many, many other items, some of which you’d probably
rather not know. Tip
– Your only goal during training is to get your training partner
through successfully. I
can see you now. You probably re-read the above tip twice to make sure
you read that right. Yes, I’m correct. You are not the most important
person in your crew. Your training partner is. Remember though, he or
she should be reading this too so you’re safe! While
a strong partner can sail you through training, a weak one can sink you.
If you find yourself with a strong partner, you’ll rejoice in the way
checklists get completed quickly and accurately. You’ll find joy in
shooting ten approaches in a two-hour sim session. You’ll come out of
each sim session with ever increasing knowledge and confidence. If this
is the case, thank your lucky stars. If
however, you find yourself with a weak partner, or one who just learns
at a different pace than you do, your training will be a bit more
difficult. Everyone
learns at a different pace. Some of us can pick up on things right away
and don’t need to be told over and over to arm the approach mode prior
to intercepting the ILS. Others however need constant hand holding and
reminding about what to do and how to do it. Some might take to the
airplane in five sim sessions while others might need eight to achieve
the same level of competence. Unfortunately, you have a limited number
of sim sessions with which to achieve the required level of competence. If
you find yourself with a partner who is slow and who seems to need extra
help, you have no choice but to spend time with them. Remember the tip.
However, all is not lost. It’s just going to require more effort on
your part. While going through sim training, it is highly recommended
that for every hour you spend in the sim, you spend another hour with
your partner, chair flying. Sitting
in chairs side by side going over calls and profiles and checklists
needs to be done over and over. Better yet, if you have access to a
CPT during your simulator training, by all means, use it. Work with
your partner over and over and over. Work over any problem areas
until you make sure that both of you can do any maneuver or approach in the
book. Perfectly, without fail. With each required call. In the proper
order. If
you mess up, go back to the beginning and start again. It’s kind of
like being in grade school and having the teacher catch you running
in the halls. You have to go back to the beginning and do it over,
the correct way. If aren’t willing to spend this extra time with your
partner during simulator training, you may as well just stop the
training and go home. You obviously aren’t taking the whole event as
seriously as you need to. Consider
this. More than a few checkrides have been failed because the person who
was not getting the checkride but merely riding in the other
seat, screwed up. Remember,
the key to passing your checkride is to have a good PNF (pilot not
flying). If your training partner can’t program the FMS or is always
hitting the wrong button on the Autopilot panel, you might suddenly find
yourself in the middle of a type ride, off course, off altitude, or
worse, completely and utterly FUBAR. (messed up beyond all recognition). Too
bad you’re the one being checked at the moment and not your partner.
Your training partner can’t fail your checkride. If your partner
can’t pass the checkride, chances are YOU won’t be able to
either. CPT
(COCKPIT PROCEDURE TRAINIER) Otherwise
known as the "paper tiger" Somewhere
in your training, after the ground school and prior to the simulator,
you will probably find yourself in the CPT. The CPT is used for learning
and practicing flows, checklists, calls, and procedures, as well as
where every switch and gauge and panel in the cockpit is located. While
some approach this phase of their training with boredom and disgust,
other find it useful, apply themselves, take it seriously, and can’t
seem to get enough. Guess which attitude points at a greater chance of
successfully completing the training event? Your
time in the CPT is your chance to practice procedures over and over
until you get them right and to learn which procedures you will be
expected to use. Even
something, which sounds as easy as a normal takeoff, can be a problem in
a complex airplane that has both pilots very busy. In the simulator,
since things are happening in real time, at first you’ll find yourself
feeling like you’re just along for the ride, playing catch-up to an
airplane you are not yet familiar with. In the CPT however, the profiles
and calls and procedures of a normal takeoff can be practiced and honed
at your own speed. Make a wrong call? Go back and start at the beginning
and do it again. Over and over with each maneuver until it flows forth
from your brain with smooth efficiency. As
you spend time in the CPT, don’t sit there with a pained look on your
face, slouching in your chair, haphazardly holding the checklist, and
giving all the impression that you’d rather be anywhere else. That may
be the case, but it is to your benefit to make the most of this time.
Not only is CPT time cheap and plentiful, but you will also find that
once you advance to the simulator you may return to the CPT to work
through any problem areas. JUMPSEATING One
of the most important things you can do at this stage of the game is to
go jumpseat in the airplane you’re
about to start learning how to fly. I cannot stress this enough. Do as
much of it as you possibly can, time permitting. Some companies even require
it. Jumpseating will allow you to watch the procedures you just learned
in the CPT be put into action in the hands of pilots who fly the
airplane day in and day out. Watch them, see how they budget their
time, learn how they put those procedures to use. Ask questions. If
you have ever flight instructed, you know that one of the best ways to learn
something is to see it demonstrated before you attempt it yourself and
jumpseating accomplishes this. SIMULATOR
TRAINING Probably
the most critical part of this game you’ve chosen to play, is the
simulator training itself. The simulator is one big video game and there
are several players involved- you, your partner, the instructor(s) and
the examiner. Hopefully,
you will be lucky enough to have people from you own company’s
training department for instructors. These people have your best
interests in mind as well as their own. No one knows your airplane and
how the company wants it flown better than your own instructors. Your
chances of passing are much higher if you have a company instructor
versus one from an outside source like the aircraft’s manufacturer or
an outside training company. And, contrary to what many pilots seem
to think, the training department is not out to fail everybody. If they
did fail everybody, the airline would become understaffed, flights would
get cancelled, the airline would lose revenue as a result. No one would
be happy with that. The training department is out to ensure that you
meet the standards that your airline and the FAA require. With
an outside training source, your chances of receiving quality
instruction diminish somewhat. There are admittedly some very good
instructors out there that do a very fine job. However the reverse is
all too often true. You might find a low time pilot with no practical
experience as your instructor. You might find a bitter instructor who
maybe got turned down for a pilot job by your very company. Either way,
the outside training source is paid to train you. Notice
I didn’t say to train you successfully. They go through the motions,
collect their checks, and sign you off for checkrides whether you can
pass them or not. This opinion was finely honed during two training
events of my own over the past ten years. One with a dedicated
simulator training company and the other with the training department of the
aircraft manufacturer. Neither was what one could remotely call a
satisfactory experience. When
you first meet your simulator instructor, it will be easy to tell if
this person has your best interests in mind. A good instructor will ask
your background and will take it into consideration as he explains
maneuvers and teaches them. He should approach the training like you
three are a team. Remember, it’s a game. Your opponent however, is not
the instructor, but the examiner. This is not you against the instructor
and then you again against the examiner. The instructor’s job is to
teach you, not simply evaluate you. If he can’t do this, then he has
no business doing what he or she is doing. Every
simulator session should start out with a thorough pre-brief. All
maneuvers should be covered in great detail. It is not enough to say
that steep turns are to be done at 250 knots and 45 degrees of bank. The
instructor should tell you exactly how to make the maneuver successful.
Such as: 68 to 70% thrust, 2.5 to 3 degrees nose up – use the IVSI as
a trend indicator for your altitude, put the armrests down, put your
elbows against them and use just your fingers to control the yolk
pressure. Details are important. The instructor knows, or should know
what parameters the sim requires to make the maneuver work. If he
doesn’t tell you, ask! All
too often however we are left to the wolves. The briefing is short and
once in the sim the instructor just evaluates. "Do this"
"No, that’s not right, do it again" "No that‘s still
not right - I don’t know if you’re going to be able to pass
this". Sounds too incredible to believe? I’ve got news for you my
friend. It’s not. Be
a Pessimist Do
you know the difference between a pessimist and an optimist? An optimist
always hopes for the best and is disappointed when things don’t turn
out. A pessimist always expects the worst and is pleasantly surprised
when things turn out ok. As
you go through the simulator, be a pessimist. Expect the worst. Every
low visibility takeoff has an abort. If you successfully make it
through the takeoff roll to V1, you’ll get a V1 cut. Every V1 cut
has a failure of the most critical engine. Every approach is to a
missed. Every two engine approach ends in a single-engine missed, with a
fire, with a turn at 500 feet, with the most critical engine failed
and so on. Never should you be caught off guard. Always expect the
worst and if it doesn’t happen, you’ll be pleasantly surprised. Simulators
do not fly like the real airplane, no matter how hard anyone tries to
make you believe that they do. Usually the pitch is overly sensitive and
quite often they react totally unlike the airplane when flaps are
selected. I recall a simulator a few years back that if left alone,
would gain over 1000 feet and slow to the stick pusher in a steep
nose-up attitude, just from extending the flaps to 8 degrees at proper
flap extension speed. This required a strong arm on the yolk to overcome
or, as another technique, about five seconds worth of down elevator trim
starting about three seconds prior to calling for the flap
extension! And they called this realistic??? As
you go through sim training, you may experience times of frustration
with yourself, the simulator, your partner, and yes, even your wonderful
instructor! Whatever you do, do not take your frustrations out on the
simulator. Yanking and stomping and rowing a boat with the thrust levers
will only get you in trouble. You
and your training partner should make ever effort to assist each other
as much as possible. Now there are several schools of thought on this
but think of it this way. If the instructor thinks you’re helping too
much, let him tell you. Otherwise, go for broke and help out. If a
checklist needs to be called for but it hasn’t been done, don’t sit
there as PNF and stare straight ahead in silence while your partner
bungles his checkride. Get out the checklist and hold it on your leg
closest to your partner. Drop the checklist and say loudly something
like, "sorry, I dropped the CHECKLIST". If they aren't flying
coordinated during single engine operations, discreetly tap the rudder pedals.
You and your training partner can discuss secret "key words"
to use to help each other during your training and checkride. Remember
this whole thing is a game. If the person is really engrossed in
what they’re doing, and doesn’t pick up on your signals, just
come right out and ask if they want the checklist read. While the
instructor and later on, the examiner, needs to see the Pilot
Flying (PF) perform duties and tasks, it’s still a two pilot
airplane. Don’t let any instructor tell you that as PNF you have to just
sit there, only doing something when asked. That’s BS. Every
training department has a syllabus on what and how and when you’re
taught a particular task or maneuver. Often this syllabus is very good
and gives the instructor the exact technique to teach or method for you
to use in order to complete the maneuver to company satisfaction. Get a
copy of it! You need to know what is going to be taught and how. Study
the following day’s lesson, read the profiles, read any malfunctions
in the QRH, and go over these items with your training partner before
you set foot in the simulator. Hopefully
your instructor teaches from that syllabus so that there are no
surprises in order for you down the road. This not only ensures that you
perform a maneuver the way the training department wants it performed,
but also should ensure that come the checkride you are well prepared and
have been trained in each required task to be evaluated. On
the other hand, good simulator training requires an instructor who can
think outside the box so to speak. It is good for the instructor to be
standard and to follow the syllabus but there are times when creativity
is required in order to reach a student. If you are one of these
students that has been shown the "right" way to perform a task
but still can’t get it, you’ll be far better off if your instructor
is able to show you a different means to the same end. In other words,
there is more than one way to do just about everything. It’s his job
to get you ready for the checkride and if that means teaching you a
different technique, one that you DO understand, then he’s doing his
job properly and should be commended for it. As
I was told 20 years ago when I first started taking flying lessons, take
every technique you are taught and put them together into one package
that works for you and is safe. It’s as easy as that. There are few
absolutes. THE
CHECKRIDE When
it comes time for the checkride, make sure you get a good night’s
sleep, make sure you have all required items with you before you leave
for the simulator, and above all, relax. Think of this as just another
flight in the sim, this time with someone else watching. Inhale,
breathe, and do what’s required and what you’ve been trained.
Don’t become a mental basket case and don’t succumb to
"checkride-itis". I
know this is easier said than done. You’re putting your license, your
job and maybe your career on the line each time you step up to the plate
for a checkride. See what power the check airman has over you? See what
power you’re giving him? Just relax. Often
times a quick talk with your training partner prior to a checkride is
beneficial. Maybe it’s just a pep talk or maybe it’s a stern plea to
the PNF not push that wrong button just this once! Regardless, if you
think it’s required, by all means, do it. Again
remember that your training partner cannot fail your checkride. Another
word of advice: at my airline we have callouts to make if the PNF is
deviating from where the airplane is supposed to be. For deviations on
the LOC or GS, or Altitude, Speed, Heading, etc, the PNF is supposed to
call out the item and the PF is to respond with "Correcting".
This is a good policy, but if you’re the PF, don't call out
"Correcting" if the PNF hasn’t said anything. The examiner
might be sitting back there writing on a form or programming the
simulator and not paying total attention to you. If he hears you say
Correcting without the PNF having said anything, all you’re doing is
calling needless attention to the fact that you’re doing something
you’re not supposed to be doing. Get it? When
you first meet the person giving you the checkride, be it a company
check airman or someone from the FAA, you can usually tell right away
what kind of day you’re in for. The
classic story is one where the examiner walked in, sat down and made two
nice little piles on the table, right in front of two would-be Captains
and said, "Now the FAA gave me four packs of pink slips and only
one stack of white slips, what do you think they’re trying to tell
me?" I
don’t know what they’re trying to tell him, but what that should be
telling you is that you suddenly got sick and will need to reschedule
your ride at another time, with a less pompous ass! Seriously,
the above was actually said to two hopeful Captains. Many hours and two
pink slips later, two pilots learned that not all checkrides are fair. Unfortunately,
fair or not, your fault or not, if the outcome of your checkride is less
than successful, usually no one really wants to hear about it from you.
It is assumed that you’re complaining simply because you failed. This
is a fact of life and you can’t change it. If you’re really worried
about a fair ride, get a union member (if you have one) to observe.
Otherwise, I’m afraid you’re at the mercy of the examiner and fair
or not, his word stands. Ain’t life grand? Most
checkrides however, do go successfully. Most examiners are truly
interested in seeing you pass and good ones even make the ride almost
pleasant! They’ll ask to see maneuvers and tasks you’ve been trained
on and will not get creative or sadistic or cruel. Of all the examiners
I’ve seen, only a very few have been anything less than professional.
IN
CLOSING It
is my sincere hope that this helps you get through your next training
event with less anxiety. During my tenure in the training
department I saw many more successes than failures. The successes
all demonstrated their ability to follow items I’ve discussed and in
fact, many of the ideas I’ve written about have came from students and
fellow pilots as they talked about their training events. Likewise, the
failures I saw mostly resulted from a lack of proper attitude or
dedication while in the training environment. Since
training, both initial and recurrent is a part of this career we’ve
chosen, it makes sense to make these events as painless as possible. Good luck.
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