BATC Briefing Guide 1 FEB 2022
BATC Briefing Guide 1 FEB 2022
BATC Briefing Guide 1 FEB 2022
Preflight/Mission Briefing
The crew shall conduct a preflight briefing. Briefing items should comprise of but not be 2.1.4.4. Crew Coordination
limited to these following topics:
a. Preflight responsibilities
2.1.4.1. Introduction b. Transfer of aircraft control
a. Crew introduction
c. Radio procedures, in-flight checklist responsibilities
d. Sterile cockpit rule
Crew status (medical status, rest, nutrition etc.);
Documents - Pilot license and medical certificate; 2.1.4.5. Emergency Procedures
Time hack. a. Crew responsibilities during emergencies – fire / engine failure, forced landing / crew
2.1.4.2. Mission
incapacitation
a. Overall Mission Briefing b. Take-off - Abort conditions / procedure
Syllabus / Objectives. c. Physiological incidents
b. Weather
METARs and TAFs; 2.1.4.6. Open Questions
Winds (Surface and Aloft);
PASSENGER BRIEFING
Actual and Prognostic Weather Charts;
“S-A-F-E-S-T Briefing’
Ground-based Radar and Satellite Imageries.
Seatbelts (Operation)
c. Departure
Air Vents (Location/Operation)
Departure NOTAMs;
Fire Extinguisher (Location)
Runway in-use and expected taxi routes;
Exit Use (Location/Operation)
Communication and ATIS;
Survival/First Aid Kit/Passenger Safety Briefing Card (Location)
Airfield obstacles and lighting;
Traffic Watch (Clock Reference/Notification)
Engine run-up position;
The Most important of all, all passenger must observe a ‘Sterile Cockpit Rule’ at all time.
Takeoff type and aircraft configuration;
Departure route / Altitude/ Airspeed; 2.1.5. Post-Flight Debriefing
Takeoff Alternate (if required) – Route / Frequency. The post-flight debriefing session is considered to be one of the most important part of the
d. En-route flight training process. It provides an opportunity for flight instructors and students to replay and
Routing / Altitudes / Distances / Timing; reconstruct the mission flown. Afterwards, an assessment and evaluation can be made. The
Frequencies; following guideline may be used for the post-flight debriefing;
Navigation Aids; 1. Replay
Terrain Considerations / Highest MEF; Verbally replay the entire flight
Critical Point / Point of Safe Return; Identify areas of conflicting perception
Specific Practice Maneuvers; 2. Reconstruction
Emergency divert airfields (information and frequencies). What could you have been done?
e. Arrival/Approach What would you have been done?
Arrival route / Top of Descent / CDFA vs step-down; What should you have done?
Approach Procedure / Runway-in-use / Pattern Entry; 3. Reflect
Destination NOTAMs; What were the most important lessons learned?
Expected taxi routes; What part of the flight was the hardest?
Communication and ATIS; Did anything make you uncomfortable? When/where/why?
Airfield obstacles and lighting; How would you assess your performance and decisions?
Alternate airport - Route/Frequency. Did you perform in accordance to flight evaluation standards?
f. Fuel Planning Technical and Non-Technical Threat and Error Management
4. Redirect
2.1.4.3. Aircraft How does this experience relate to previous flights?
a. Aircraft registration, model, and POH
What aspects of this experience might you apply to future flights? And how?
b. Aircraft document: Aircraft Logbook - check for serviceability and technical
What additional training/practice might be useful?
status
c. Weight and balance
d. Take-off and Landing Data
Refer to PPL and CPL Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) Issue: 1 Revision: 1.1 Effective Date: 1 FEB 2022 Refer to PPL and CPL Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) Issue: 1 Revision: 1.1 Effective Date: 1 FEB 2022