Old 03-14-2011 | 04:32 AM
  #6  
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Twin Wasp
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Joined: Oct 2007
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From: Sr. VP of button pushing
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Boeing has had QRHs at least since the 727. Now that lawyers rule the planet, it is much harder to say, "We don't want to do what Boeing says is best, we'll go our own way." Just counted, our 747-400 QRH has 271 pages of 241 non-normal checklists. One hundred fourteen "are informational, have no procedudual steps, or the action is obvious." One hundred twenty seven are monkey see, monkey do. The back of the normal checklist card has copies of the six that have memory items. The QRH lives in a slot outboard of each pilot seat.

I learned the 727 without the QRH, using updated Braniff books and checklists. At one point, we had no memory items, just a mantra of "Fly the plane, silence the bell, read the checklist." F/E had his own of "Essential power, download, power the bus." That lasted about a year and we ended up with 5 or 6 checklists with memory items.

Now I teach 727 stuff on the side with the Boeing QRH. Some stuff doesn't make any sense. The aborted start items aren't in the QRH, they're buried in another manual. The actions for a hot start and a failure of the start valve to close are not memory items, but per Boeing "must be accomplished by immediate recall."

On a jet there's not too many things you need to get in a hurry over. Hot start without autostart, rapid D, on the Seven Two loss of essential, on the 400 I'd add equipment cooling and remove the engine fire/fail stuff.
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