fbpx

Sky Kings: Pilot Passenger — Friend or Foe?

Unsolicited assistance can do more harm than good.

“Did you do something to my nav radios?” John was clearly confused, and I didn’t know why. But John had just realized that steady needles didn’t necessarily mean he was flying well. The flag for the glideslope confirmed his suspicion.

We were flying an ILS approach in our old Comanche 250, in the clouds with weather just above minimums. As was occasionally the case, our No. 1 nav receiver had been behaving badly, with the needles on the indicator twitching and jumping.

So I had swapped the ILS frequency to the No. 2 receiver, which was always steady, and put the VOR frequency in the No. 1 nav in case we needed to do a missed approach.

“I swapped the ILS frequency from No. 1 to No. 2,” I told John. “What?” John said in disbelief.

John swapped his gaze to the other indicator and we completed the approach just fine.

After we were on the ground, we had a discussion. “What were you doing switching my radios without telling me?” he said. “But I did tell you,” I said, “and you answered me.”

“What did I say?” “You said ‘Uh-huh,'” I responded.

“Well, it didn’t penetrate,” he said. “I was still using the No. 1 nav to fly the ILS, and I couldn’t figure out why the needles were so steady. I know my approaches aren’t that good.”

I had committed a cardinal sin regarding crew resource management, and that was understandable since I had never been trained in crew resource management. I had changed something significant, without having a standard operating procedure for doing so — and, most important, without getting positive confirmation from John that he had actually heard what I’d said to him and that he understood he should have moved his focus to the No. 2 nav display.

Together we had just proved that, unless there has been some preplanning and shared standard operating procedures, a second pilot can do more harm than good. This is often the case in general aviation.

John and I had been flying together for a little over a year and had gotten our instrument ratings only six months earlier. Our recently learned IFR procedures were probably pretty good when we were flying single pilot, but we clearly had not yet developed good crew coordination skills.

I had a tendency when in the right seat to get overly proactive about setting up radios long in advance, in anticipation of the next fix or of the approach. I sometimes did this when John was busy with other tasks and not able to watch what I was doing. The result was his seeing out of the corner of his eye my hands moving around the cockpit, and hearing knobs turning and switches flipping, without having any idea what was happening — all in all, not a comforting feeling for the pilot in command.

Over time, through trial and error and occasional “deals” like the one in our venerable Comanche, we developed procedures that made us an OK team in the cockpit. But it wasn’t until we were trained in crew resource management when we were type-rated in a Citation 500, which required two pilots, that our technique began to get good.

What we learned was that the presence of a second pilot requires management from the pilot in command. First, whether you’re flying a single-pilot airplane or a two-crew airplane, it’s important to clearly establish who is the pilot in command. It isn’t always obvious. The pilot with the most ratings or the highest time isn’t necessarily the one current in the aircraft being flown — or covered by the insurance. But it’s easy for the high-time pilot to assume he is the pilot in command.

Something that has become apparent to us over time is that when you have pilots as passengers they really want to be involved in the flight. So it takes a lot of the stress and confusion out of the situation if you can figure out a way for them to be involved that is truly helpful — or at the minimum, not distracting or detrimental to the safety of the flight.

It starts during the preflight. “Can I help you with the preflight?” pilot passengers will often say. Unless you manage this situation well, you are very likely to get distracted and overlook something. Even if they know the airplane type well, they don’t know your airplane and how you like to do things.

If I don’t assign them a task, they’ll likely keep talking or go do something on their own that they think is helpful. So I try to assign my pilot passengers tasks that really help me out, such as loading the luggage or untying the airplane.

During the flight, with my pilot passenger serving as a second pilot, it’s important to define exactly what the second pilot’s role will be. And it helps a lot if the pilot in command explains to the second pilot that unrequested help, if offered at the wrong time, could actually be a risk factor. The key is for the pilot in command to stay in control of things.

I will often have second pilots handle the communications. Since I can hear what’s happening, I can always speak up if needed. Plus, at my command, they can read checklists. And sometimes I’ll ask them to change navigation frequencies for me, at my request only, or insert a waypoint in the GPS flight plan if they’re familiar with my unit. I also ask them to tell me when a checklist or other task they have been assigned is complete.

The most important thing they can do is make callouts to help with my situational awareness. For an IFR flight I’ll ask them to give me a callout on climb or descent when I’m 1,000 feet from my new altitude, and again when I’m 300 feet from it. I’ll also brief them on my standards for when on final — such as a descent of no more than 1,000 fpm, and speed no more than plus-10 over planned threshold speed — and ask them to give me a callout if I exceed those. These tasks not only keep my pilot passengers engaged in the flight, and thereby ensure they enjoy it more, but they also help make me a safer pilot.

One of the corollaries of assuming command authority is consideration and respect for your second pilot. This means flying in a standardized, expected way. I know from experience that if I’m not flying in a standardized way, my pilot passenger will first get nervous, and then get more participatory — sometimes in a counterproductive way.

As I alluded to earlier, one situation fraught with potential conflict is when the second pilot has higher ratings or significantly more hours than the pilot in command. A few years ago my friend Valerie needed to fly her Husky to a nearby airport for its annual and asked an acquaintance — who said he was a high-time pilot with taildragger experience — if he wanted to go along for the flight.

Unfortunately, Valerie didn’t brief him on what she expected of him — which was nothing, other than his company. The acquaintance started issuing instructions to her, including giving her the destination airport unicom frequency from memory and getting it wrong, and then grabbed the stick during the landing because he felt she was too fast. Valerie did a go-around, and landed smoothly on the second attempt after telling her passenger not to touch anything. It turned out he had never flown a Husky and wasn’t current in taildraggers.

Valerie’s story made me thoughtful about how I could prevent a similar situation from happe­ning to me when taking a casual acquaintance as a second pilot in a light aircraft. The answer, I decided, would be to anticipate possible confusion or conflict and give a good “captain’s briefing” before we ever got in the airplane.

The major items of discussion would be who is pilot in command, what tasks the second pilot could do without request (such as putting the next expected frequency in the comm radio) and which tasks they could not do without my specific request (such as changing the navigation radios), and how they should communicate to me that they had completed a task. I’m confident this would go a long way toward ensuring a safer and more fun flight for both of us.

And when I’m a second pilot, I now know better than to accept “uh-huh” as full and complete communication.

Get exclusive online content like this delivered straight to your inbox by signing up for our free enewsletter.

We welcome your comments on flyingmag.com. In order to maintain a respectful environment, we ask that all comments be on-topic, respectful and spam-free. All comments made here are public and may be republished by Flying.

Login

New to Flying?

Register

Already have an account?