View Single Post
Old 05-08-2016, 08:47 AM   #10600
Talus1
Senior Member
 
Talus1's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2014
Drives: '06 Cayman, ‘23 BRZ Sport-Tech
Location: The other cottage country…
Posts: 586
Thanks: 123
Thanked 517 Times in 288 Posts
Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 2 Thread(s)
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tcoat View Post
Yep. Flight checklists. Yet another thing written by lawyers not engineers. They exist simply for liability reasons.
As somebody who used to work in aviation safety I can categorically state that flight checklists are written by engineers, not lawyers. They aren't there for liability reasons. They are designed to save lives by making sure that every step is followed and not forgotten. Good pilots use them religiously, even if they know them by heart after a few times. It is super easy to forget a step or forget to check something and you never know when that might become critical. Accidents are rarely the result of a single failure. Typically a bunch of minor things are missed, any one of which, if not missed, would have prevented the accident. The problem is that there is rarely a consequence for a single forgotten step, so as humans we get sloppy. Thats what checklists are for, to make sure that no step is forgotten so that accidents don't happen.

I've flown with a bunch of different professional pilots. There was only one that didn't use the ground and flight checklists religiously. He was also the only one I never really felt comfortable flying with, even if his natural ability to control an aircraft in flight was among the best.

The good pilots I know use the checklists with the same discipline and diligence that they apply to all their other flying skills. They try to do everything better on this flight than the last one and spend time thinking about how to do the next one better.

For sure there are legal implications, as there are for anything else where humans are involved...
__________________
Anything worth doing is worth doing twice...
Talus1 is offline