Title: Airmanship
1Airmanship
This presentation provides an overview of
Airmanship in aviation. It is intended to
enhance the reader's understanding, but it shall
not supersede the applicable regulations or
airline's operational documentation. Should there
be any discrepancy between this presentation and
an airlines AFM /(M)MEL/FCOM/QRH/FCTM, the
latter shall prevail at all times.
2Introduction
This visual guide defines airmanship and
illustrates its importance to safe flight
operations. Its objective is to reinforce the
importance of airmanship as the basis of safe
flight operations. The material may be used for
self-study or as part of a formal training
presentation. The speakers notes provide
additional information.
3Contents
- Airmanship Defined
- The Building of Airmanship
- Violations
- Summary
4Airmanship Defined
- Airmanship is the consistent use of good judgment
and - well-developed skills to accomplish flight
objectives. - The consistency required of good airmanship is
- Founded on a cornerstone of uncompromising flight
discipline - Developed through systematic skill acquisition
and proficiency - A high state of situational awareness completes
the airmanship picture and is obtained through
knowledge of ones self, aircraft, environment,
team and risk. - (Kern, 1996)
-
5Consequences of Poor Airmanship
- Accidents and incidents
- Poor airmanship is a causal factor in almost all
of the 70 percent of accidents that are
attributed to human factors - Operational weaknesses and inefficiencies
- Poor airmanship is responsible for operational
weaknesses and inefficiencies that lead to
increased safety risk, poor performance and
wasted money
6The Building of Airmanship
- Judgment All of the elements of airmanship
support good judgment and decision making, just
as all of the structural elements of a building
support its roof. - Knowledge enables situational awareness, but,
like judgment, it is also a trait that must be
developed. - In-depth knowledge of many subjects will support
the thinking processes of Airmanship. - Airmanship is founded on skills and proficiency
it includes both technical and non-technical
subjects. - Discipline is the bedrock of airmanship it is
the ability and willpower to fly safely.
7Discipline
- Discipline is
- Behavior in accord with rules of conduct
- Behavior and order maintained by training and
control - An individuals personal commitment to comply
with rules and procedures - The willpower and ability to operate safely
- The exercise of discipline requires
- Not accepting that rules must be broken to
accomplish a job effectively - Rejecting opportunities for shortcuts or doing
things better - Resisting temptation to break rules to impress
others - Control of personal attitudes and biases
8Skills
- Skills are abilities that are learned, usually
through training, to - achieve a desired outcome. Two basic
classifications of skills are - Perceptual-motor skills, which involve an
interaction between a perception and a voluntary
movement. Perceptual-motor skills are - Taught during initial and recurrent training
- Required to fly aircraft in normal and emergency
situations - Cognitive skills, which involve mental processes
such as comprehension, judgment, memory and
reasoning. Cognitive skills are - More complex than perceptual-motor skills
- Related to learning and recall
- Involved in gaining and maintaining situational
awareness and in decision making - Used when speaking, listening and understanding
9Hierarchy of Skills
Precision Precise technical and non-technical
skills result from personal endeavor
Efficient An aircraft commander controls the
aircraft and leads a team
Effective Broader, non-technical skills and
experience give efficient operation
Safe Continuing training, experience and
improving airmanship will enable you to operate
effectively as a crewmember
Unskilled Basic training provides only those
skills necessary to be safe
The most skillful pilot had the most experience."
10Proficiency
- Proficiency refers to competence in a specific
area. Generally speaking, - research has shown that it takes practice four
hours a day for 10 years for a person to become
an expert in a particular domain. With this in
mind, it is essential that pilots do the
following to become proficient at flying - Practice flying at every opportunity
- Practice a variety of flying scenarios (e.g.,
nonprecision approaches, hand flying, etc.) - Create meaningful situations that will expand
your experience base (e.g., fly new routes,
learn a new aircraft, obtain an additional
rating) - Practice often and practice consistently, so that
skills become automatic -
- It is important to note that if a pilot
transitions to a new aircraft, he/she may - have to learn new skills or relearn old skills in
the context of the new - aircraft.
11Knowledge
- Pilots must possess comprehensive knowledge about
the aircraft, nature - of the flight, possible abnormal and emergency
conditions, their own - qualities and the qualities of their team
members. Pilots must have a - confident understanding of
- Aircraft
- Procedures, techniques, limitations
- Self
- Physical fitness and flying proficiency
- Sources of human error, methods of error
detection, techniques for reducing the effects of
errors - Team
- Capabilities and limitations of crew, ground
staff, engineering and ATC - Common understanding of aircraft characteristics
and operating procedures - Environment
- Weather and terrain
- Organizational, political, regulatory and
commercial environments - Risks
- Identification and assessment
- Organizational standards designed to reduce risks
- Mission Statement
12Situational Awareness
- Situational awareness is knowing where you are,
what is going on, where - you are going and what is likely to come next.
It develops when you have a - mental picture based on accurate data.
Situational awareness is a closed-loop process in
which a pilot continuously seeks more or better
information to gain and maintain it. - Three processes in gaining and maintaining
situational awareness - Gather information through basic senses (vision,
hearing, balance, smell, touch) - Integrate and interpret (i.e., comprehend)
sensory information - Use information to project plans and actions into
future - Pitfalls in the development of situational
awareness - The senses can be fooled in some situations
(e.g., illusions) - Complete and reliable information may not be
accessible, especially in situations you have not
encountered before - Information systems are not always reliable
- Incorrect expectations
- Distractions
- Extremely high (emergency) or extremely low
workload (boredom) - Overconfidence and familiarity with a situation
that lead to failure to accomplish and repeat the
three processes
13Judgment
- Judgment is the process that leads to a decision.
Judgment is supported - by all the other elements of airmanship. Similar
to judgment, - aeronautical decision making (ADM) is a
systematic approach to the mental - processes used by pilots to consistently
determine the best course of action in response
to a given set of circumstances. - Good pilot judgment and ADM require the ability
and motivation to - Discover and establish the relevance of all
available information relating to problems of
flight - Diagnose problems
- Specify alternative courses of action
- Assess the risk associated with each
alternative - Choose and execute a suitable course of action
within the available time frame. (Jensen, 1995)
Judgment always involves a problem or choice, an
unknownelement and usually a time constraint and
stress.
14Airmanship Priorities
- Good airmanship based on sound judgment involves
the - following order of priorities
- Fly the aircraft Check attitude, speed,
altitude, instruments and automation - Navigate Know where the aircraft is and where
it is going - Communicate Discuss and review the issues,
share tasks, back up each other - Manage Take follow-up action and use
appropriate levels of automation - Monitor Check to see what has changed and take
control when unexpected events occur
These are the Golden Rules of flying.
15Airmanship Tips 1
- Be alert and ready for the unexpected
- Gather information before deciding
- Challenge and validate information
- Consult
- Evaluate consequences
- Ensure mutual backup and cross-check
- Check results of actions
- Be prepared to reject any constraint that would
decrease situation control
16Airmanship Tips 2
- Be alert and prepared for typical
flight-phase-related emergencies - Consider trajectory as priority no.1 at all times
- Adhere to published procedures, when available
- Never leave a situation unresolved (ambiguity,
doubt, disagreement, alert or cockpit effect) - Prioritize tasks as a function of prevailing
condition - Keep all options open and be ready to change
initial plans
17Airmanship Tips 3
- Stay ahead of the aircraft at all times
- Share experience and lessons learned
- and - last but not least
- Be aware, to be mentally prepared.
18Summary
- Airmanship is
- Founded on discipline (self, team, corporate)
- Continuously striving for self-improvement and
optimal personal performance - Airmanship requires
- A wide range of perceptual-motor skills
- A wide range of cognitive skills
- A wide range of knowledge (self, aircraft,
environment, risk) - Appropriate attitudes
- Airmanship can be developed through training
- and refined through practice and experience.
19References Links
- Redefining Airmanship, Tony Kern, 1996, ISBN
0070342849 - Flight Safety magazine, Australia CASA
- http//www.casa.gov.au/avreg/fsa/index.htm
- Airmanship, Measuring up, Vector magazine,
CAA New Zealand, http//www.caa.govt.nz/Safety
Information, Publications, Vector - Airmanship and Flight Discipline, Tony Hayes,
Brisbane Valley Leisure Aviation Centre
http//www.auf.asn.au/students/Airmanship.html - Jensen, R.S. (1995) Pilot Judgement and Crew
Resource Management. Avebury Aviation
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