FLYING LESSONS for July 10, 2025

Topics this week include: >> Shaky Cessna >> They still know >> How and why

Download this report in a pdf

FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances.  In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. So apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.  Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence.  You are pilot in command and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.     

FLYING LESSONS is an independent product of MASTERY FLIGHT TRAINING, INC.

This week’s LESSONS:

A reader who wishes to remain anonymous is our guest instructor this week:

A Near-Accident Experience

Our guest author invites FLYING LESSONS reader comments.

Questions? Comments? Supportable opinions? Let us know at [email protected]

Debrief 

Readers write about last week’s LESSONS:

Career flight instructor and frequent Debriefer Tony Johnson writes:

No need to apologize, Tony. Excellent insights. Thank you.

Reader/instructor Mark Sletten adds:

Indeed. That’s the essence of last week’s LESSON: what everybody knows isn’t always correct. Thanks, Mark.

Another highly experienced flight instructor (and my past editor at Private Pilot and Twin and Turbine) LeRoy Cook wraps it up this week:

LeRoy mentions the Amplified Procedures. Cessna is unique, in my experience, for having basically two Emergency Procedures and two Normal Procedures sections in its Pilot’s Operating Handbooks (POHs): a series of Operational Checklists, and repeating some the same and expanding on others, more detailed Amplified Procedures. 

Let’s look at a Cessna 150M POH to see how the Operational Checklists and the Amplified Procedures compare. The Emergency Procedures section begins with this introduction:

Here is a sample:

Engine Failure During Flight

The Operational Checklist provides the scope and sequence of entering a glide and attempting to restart a failed engine:

  1. Airspeed – 60 KIAS
  2. Carburetor heat – ON
  3. Primer – IN and LOCKED
  4. Fuel shutoff valve – ON
  5. Mixture – RICH
  6. Ignition switch – BOTH (or START if propeller is stopped)

Now here’s the Amplified Procedure for the same scenario:

The Amplified Procedures then goes on to describe making a forced landing in detail Essentially, the Operational Checklist tells you what to do, and the Amplified Procedures suggest how to do it

Now let’s look at a sample Normal Procedure in its two Cess-nish forms:

The Amplified Procedures explains:

Again, the checklist tells you what to do, the amplification suggests how to do it.

There are several items in the Emergency and Normal Amplified Procedures that do not have a corresponding Operational Checklist, including but not limited to taxiing, stalls, warm-up, magneto check, alternator check, power check, flap setting (subject of last week’s LESSONS that started this discussion), and enroute climb in the Normal Procedures; and landing without elevator control, vacuum system failure, executing a 180° turn in the clouds, emergency descent through clouds, recovery from spiral dive, spark plug fouling, and flight in icing conditions in the Emergencies section. Spins are covered in both Amplified Procedures sections, as a planned maneuver in the Normal section and an inadvertent condition in Emergencies. 

If you fly a Cessna, take a good look at the Amplified Procedures portions of Sections 3 and 4 of your POH. Make reviewing these sections a routine part of your continuing education. If you fly some other aircraft type and do not have expanded discussion of normal and emergency procedures in your handbook, search online for a similar Cessna product and read through its Amplified Procedures. Use these are a jumping-off point for considering how and why you’d perform your airplane’s POH’s checklists and similar scenarios and discussion with other pilots and instructors in your type, realizing that design differences may result in different procedures and techniques in the airplane you fly. 

Thank you, LeRoy.

More to say? Let us learn from you, at [email protected]

Share safer skies. Forward FLYING LESSONS to a friend

Please help cover the ongoing costs of providing FLYING LESSONS through this secure PayPal donations link. Or send a check made out to Mastery Flight Training, Inc. at 247 Tiffany Street, Rose Hill, Kansas USA 67133. Thank you, generous supporters.

Thank you to our regular monthly financial contributors:

Thanks also to these donors in 2025:


Pursue Mastery of Flight®

Thomas P. Turner, M.S. Aviation Safety 

Flight Instructor Hall of Fame Inductee

2021 Jack Eggspuehler Service Award winner

2010 National FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year 

2008 FAA Central Region CFI of the Year

FLYING LESSONS is ©2025 Mastery Flight Training, Inc.  For more information see www.thomaspturner.com. For reprint permission or other questions contact [email protected].  

Disclaimer

FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances. In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. Apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.

Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence. You are pilot in command, and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.