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Aviation CRDACrew Resource Management

Crew (or Cockpit) Resource Management (CRM) training originated from a NASA workshop in 1979 that focused on improving air safety.

 


flight crew licensing
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CREW - Both the pilots and flight attendants in the flight
CREW SCHEDULING - The department in charge of assigning flights for the crew, both the pilots and flight attendants ...

Crew For each crewmember required by the Federal aviation regulations
Flight crewmember 190 lb 240 lb
Flight attendant 170 lb 210 lb ...

Crew. Persons carried in an aeroplane who are actively engaged in its pilotage, navigation, maintenance and in other duties connected with its commercial or military purposes.

When a crew is ready to depart, it contacts ground control for permission to leave the gate. Airlines sometimes conduct their own ground control at their hubs, but only in the immediate area of their gates.

Fig. 317.--Crew's Quarters on Bodensee, a German Zeppelin. Note Construction of Duralumin Girders Built Up of Numerous Small Pieces.

C(-OFFICE)
Crew Office (AIS/MET)
C/R
Counter-rotating propellers.
CA
Abbreviation for cyanoacrylate. An instant type glue that is available in various viscosities (Thin, Medium, Thick, and Gel). These glues are ideal fo...

Rated Crew member
Aviators described in this regulation and AR 600-105.
Standardization instructor pilot (SP) ...

FCL - Flight Crew Licensing (Division), a CAA department handling all aspects of private and professional pilot, flight engineer and navigator licensing.
FCS - flight control system.
fcst - forecast. ...

Often used to settle disputes between crew members and passengers. Airplane - The infernal machine invented by two bicycle mechanics from Dayton, Ohio and perfected on the sands of the Outer Banks of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.

SLF: Flight crew lingo for Passengers: Self Loading Freight
SN: Sabena ...

When the flight crew is ready to depart, it contacts ground control for permission to leave the gate. Once an aircraft leaves the gate area and begins to taxi, it comes under the jurisdiction of FAA ground control.

Engine Indicating Crew Alerting System
elevator
Movable control surface to govern aircraft in pitch ...

C/C: Assistant Crew Chief
ATC: Air Transport Command
ATF: Air Task Force
Atlanta: Production name for first Lockheed P-38's - AAF later adopted the British RAF term "Lightning"
ATS: Air Transport Squadron
Attitude: Aspect of aircraft's angle.

Taxi operations require constant vigilance by the entire flight crew, not just the pilot taxiing the airplane. This is especially true during flight training operations.

There were three crew members-pilot, turret gunner, and radioman/bombardier/ventral gunner. A .50-caliber machine gun was mounted in each wing, and one more .

A high-frequency system enabling air traffic control to alert a particular aircraft, by means of flashing light or aural signal in the cockpit, for receipt of a message without the crew having to maintain a listening watch.

These services include: technical services such as maintenance and repairs, crew management such as hiring and payroll, training for crew personnel, security for the aircraft and travelers, and making sure FAA compliances are met.

While we're waiting, we talk to the crew of an Army Huey. They just airlifted a baby to the hospital, then during a preflight check of the helicopter they discover that the main transmission is leaking.

Hired by Henry VII, Cabot sailed the Mathew and its crew of 18 men out of Bristol on May 2, 1497, in search of a western route to India.

Perhaps the ground crew is cutting grass next to your landing runway and they inadvertently drove onto the runway just as you're on short final approach. Or, in some of the more rural airports, deer, antelope or other critters may be on the runway.

Octave joined a railroad crew where he apprenticed himself to Henry Gardner, the engineer for the Hudson River Railroad, and in a few years developed a reputation as an outstanding engineer in his own right.

provide briefing, consultation and flight documentation to flight crew members and/or other flight operations personnel;
supply other meteorological information to aeronautical users;
display the available meteorological information; ...

Encourage your crew members to speak up if they see anything questionable. Keep them informed as to your intentions, so that they will be better able to notice if something unintended is happening.

The Messerschmitt BF 110 was an all-metal twin-engine aircraft, with a three crew housed in a long enclosed cockpit. Powered by two Daimler Benz engines, it had a maximum speed of 336 mph (540 km) and had a range of 680 miles (1,094 km).

These minimums must also take the capabilities of the airplane and the crew into account. If one of these are not met the departure or approach must be aborted.

Surfaces which can be readily and clearly observed by flight crew during day and night operations, and which are suitable for judging whether or not critical surfaces are contaminated.

The lessor typically provides the aircraft and crew. Other operational requirements such as fuel, insurance, ground services, and maintenance are as negotiated.

EICAS - Engine indicating and crew alerting system.
Elevator - A small control surface hinged to the rear of the horizontal stabilizer and used to tilt an airplane up or down.
encal - Encoding Altimeter ...

Charter -- the "renting" of an aircraft with crew for a personal, business, or cargo flight from one point to another.

A courtesy car, also called a crew car, is a car provided by an FBO to transient pilots for a fairly short time free of charge or at a nominal charge. This is to run short errands or grab a quick meal. It's a great service.

Subtracting the airplane's equipped empty weight of around 1,500 pounds (slightly more with the Advanced Training Group) from the Utility weight limit leaves just 520 pounds for fuel and crew.

This idea came from my uncle Alf ex RFC airman ground crew and was used on rubber powered models in the 1930s to obtain washout as they didn't have radio then.
Bob Lane
Enter your search terms Submit search form ...

While enroute, the objective is armed, meaning that the crew and software are attempting to reach the radial. The radial is captured and the objective is met when the capture criteria are met.

COCKPIT - Compartment, originally open to the air, for accommodation of pilot'and crew/passengers.

is divided into sections that list systems description and operation, checklists and normal procedures, emergency procedures, crew duties, operating limits, adverse weather procedures, etc. Your checklist is derived from this T.O.

DUTY TIME That portion of the day when a crew member is on duty in any capacity (not just in the air). There are FAA-imposed limits on the amount of time allowed on duty.

ABSOLUTE CEILING - A less often used term - the highest altitude an airplane can sustain level flight, or altitude above which the cabin pressurization system can no longer maintain a sufficient oxygen level for passengers and crew, ...

ACMI LEASE
Abbreviation Aircraft, crew, maintenance and insurance lease (see Wet Lease)
AD
Definition Airworthiness Directive ...

FUSELAGE - An aircraft's main body structure housing the flight crew, passengers, and cargo and to which the wings, tail and, in most single-engined airplanes, engine are attached. French: fuselé, tapering.
g or G SEE LOAD FACTOR ...

P. 2 Second Pilot exercising the privileges of his licence as a required member of the operating crew
P. U/U Student Pilot; Pilot under training
Pitch The angle by which the nose of an aircraft is inclined up or down from the horizontal ...

Marker Beacon: Part of Instrument Landing System that signals crew members of distance to runway, consisting of three markers: inner, middle, and outer.

(3) The maximum height at which a vehicle or its crew can fly under given conditions.

Airfoil - 1. Sword used for dueling in flight. Often used to settle disputes between crew members and passengers. 2. What pilots wrap their sandwiches in.
...

An airline employee who is responsible for authorizing the departure of an aircraft. The dispatcher must ensure, among other things, that the aircraft's crew have all the proper information necessary for their flight and that the aircraft is in ...

Cyrus Sigari (left) and Diamond's Mark Elwess (right) prepare to fly Diamond D-Jet S/N 003. Because the aircraft is still in the testing stage, Transport Canada requires all flight crew to wear a parachute and full suite of survival gear.

AIRCRAFT- Device(s) that are used or intended to be used for flight in the air, and when used in air traffic control terminology, may include the flight crew.

When designing the pilot and copilots workstations the designers attempt to place the controls in a position where the crew can easily and comfortably operate all controls without excessive reaching or stretching.

Boarding pass - a card given to the passenger after check-in which allocates a seat number or indicates a boarding pattern. The stub of the card should be retained after going through the boarding gate to show to the flight crew once reaching the ...

These will vary according to the type of electronic navigation aids available, the location and height of terrain and obstructions in the vicinity of the airport, and in some cases according to qualifications of the crew and aircraft.

Under a code sharing agreement, the airline that actually operates the flight (the one providing the plane, the crew and the ground handling services) is called the operating carrier.

These purposes are: (1) research and development, (2) to conduct flight tests to show compliance with airworthiness regulations, (3) for crew training, (4) for exhibition, (5) for air racing, (6) to conduct market surveys and sales demonstrations, ...

See also: Flight, Aviation, Aircraft, Power, Pilot