The recent repatriation
of VH-EBA has taken me back through the memories that are contained
in one’s logbook entries, and I have often been struck with the
amount of air-time one accumulated, (and the costs involved to the
operator), in gaining one’s cherished endorsement for the licence.
This was my
experience being typical of us all, unless transferring across as
an established Captain from the previous mainline type. In which
case, move straight on to the 1st Class endorsement.
With no previous
multi-jet time, one spent some time gathering exposure to the type
in route operations, crewing as a ‘Second Officer’ following a ‘2nd
Class endorsement, B707-138B’.
To arrive at
this point involved
- 2 months
of ‘nut n bolts’ classroom study, (chalk and talk).
- The following
month involved 10 periods of 3 hours (30 hrs) of ‘fixed base’
simulator… nowadays termed a systems trainer, but in its time
it was leading edge stuff. Whilst the landing fidelity was hardly
realistic, everything else was spot-on. 4-engine; 3-engine; 2-engine
circuits. ILS, Back-beam approaches, VOR, ADF, all the program
being generally shared with one’s ‘crash-mate’, as is still done
today.
- Next, 2 quick
sectors, out and back to Nadi in my case, as a Technical Observer,
viewing the finished product.
- Then, off
to Avalon, and the real thing. I see that I participated in 3
sorties, some 3.30 hours in all. (The second in the lovely VH-EBA).
These consisted of 11 day and 4 night circuits; one of which was
conducted on 3 engines, another on 2 engines, two flown with the
stabilizer manually operated (much cranking on the large trim
wheel at one’s knee) and a ‘jammed stab’ to finish it off. This
is where the stabilizer was deactivated at a reasonably fast forward
speed, and the aircraft re-trimmed for the slower landing speed
by ‘splitting’ the flaps. (Inboards and Outboards at differing
settings). Very rewarding when done well. An ADF letdown was all
that was extended to we lowly ones, as it was sufficient to activate
the 2nd Class Instrument Rating.
Life then consisted
of the normal crewing requirements of long-haul operations, with
little handling practice unless on the ‘landing list’, when an occasional
benevolent Captain would take pity and permit one to demonstrate
his skills in the landing manoeuvre enroute. Should this not occur
during a finite period (90 days?) then one’s list currency was withdrawn
and one waited until the next 6 monthly licence renewal to start
all over again.
However, sometime
in the future would come promotion, and the need to update to the
1st Class endorsement for one’s 1st Class
ATPL.
Back to the
simulator, now very much improved, 6 axis of motion, and rudimentary
visual systems, either moving model over fixed scenic landscape,
or fixed model over endless scenic belt; which came first I now
forget.
- 6 more 3
hour periods (18 hours) shared with a ‘crash mate’ of all the
usual procedures, mainly ‘non-standard’, then off to Avalon as
before.
- 2 sorties
amounting to 3.10 hours, 17 circuits in all, of which 6 were cross-wind
operations (limits being 23kts for T/O and 27kts for landing)
And that was
that.
I have summarised
my activities during endorsement on the 138B at Avalon, and they
are as follows.
TAKE OFFS
(117 in all). (Not necessarily followed by doing the landing)
4-engine x 53
day and 24 night.
3-engine x 19
day
4 x followed
by the deactivation of the electrical stabilizer trim, requiring
Manual Stab.
7 x cross wind
LANDINGS
(95 in all)
4-engine x 14
day and 24 night
3-engine x 10
day
2-engine x 11
day
10 bad weather
circuits (at less than 500’ I recall) day and night
5 approaches
and landings off very high offsets
3 approaches
off broad lateral offsets
7 x jammed stabilizer
(i.e. ‘split flap’)
2 x manual stabilizer
1 x inoperative
spoilers
1 x flapless
6 x 4-engine
and 1 x 3-engine cross wind
and on the instrument
side of things,
3 x ADF approaches
7 x ILS approaches
3 x 3-engined
ILS approaches
And 1 x auto
coupled - autopilot ILS. (NOT AUTOLAND, just coupled to minima.)
And all in
the aeroplane. How much must all of this have cost per 1st class
endorsee? The
aircraft were taken out of productive service during all of this,
and were exposed to hull-loss in the event of things going pear-shaped.
No wonder we have simulators.
David Long
712 hours B707-138B
3, 933 hours B707-338C
February 2007
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