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B-727
Practice Oral
Product Description
The important thing to keep in mind
when you take an oral exam is that you must really understand how
the aircraft systems work. Sure, you need to know what every switch,
control and indicator does, but it must be more than that. Much
more. You need to have a working knowledge of every system
schematic, and you must be able to visualize how all the systems
interact.
Let's take the Engine Fire Handle as
an example. Now, at some point you probably memorized a "laundry
list" of events that occur when you pull the fire handle. (You
close the Engine Fuel Shutoff Valve, Arm the Bottle Discharge
Button, arm the Engine Selector Valve, close the Wing Anti-Ice
Valves for engine 1 or 3, close the Cowl Anti-Ice Valve for engine
2, close the Engine Bleed Valve, close the Fluid Shutoff Valve for
engine 1 or 2, disable the associated Hydraulic Low Pressure Light,
and trip the Field Breaker after a short delay.) And, of course, for
engine 2 you also close the Engine 2/APU Bleed Valves, and close the
APU Air Load Control Valve as a consequence. Whew! That's a lot to
memorize!
Let's try an easier way to remember
all of that: when you pull the fire handle, you shut off the flow of
all fluids that pass through the firewall and you trip the field.
Period. When I say fluids I mean fuel, hydraulic fluid and bleed
air. Only the fluids that pass through the firewall are shut off.
(Now you'll never again have difficulty trying to remember if the
engine anti-ice is shut off for engines 1 and 3. The bleed air for
engine anti-ice doesn't pass through the engine firewall, so it's
not shut off. On engine 2, it passes through the firewall to
anti-ice the S-duct, so the cowl valve is closed.)
Now just imagine if you could watch
this taking place on a video. See a picture of the Selector Valve
being positioned to the desired fire bottle, see a schematic of the
fluid shutoff. Well, that's what you get on our "B-727 Practice
Oral" video. On this one-hour video, you'll hear "operational"
questions posed, then you'll hear correct, complete answers as you
see the switch, control, indicator or system. You'll start on the
Engineer's panel and by the end of the DVD you will fear it no
more.
I'll be honest with you. When you go
to take your oral you'll need more than systems knowledge. You'll
need to know all of the limits that are published for immediate
recall in your airline's flight manual. We don't cover those, since
they're strictly rote memory. (If you want to learn how to develop a
steel-trap memory, you'll get that and more in our "Successful
Simulator Training".) Also, you'll need mastery of your
airline's Operations Specifications, and, again, we don't cover
that. But we do cover Systems, and we do it extremely well.
This video is the perfect way to
cement and integrate your systems knowledge on the B-727. Whether
you're preparing for your Proficiency Check or Rating Ride oral,
playing "stump the dummy" with your crew-mates, or simply
refreshing your systems knowledge, you'll find that this DVD really
puts it all together. After you use this to prepare for an oral,
you'll wonder how you ever got along without it.
Customer Comments
"I really enjoyed your
videos. I work for Delta and their systems are the same as those in
the tapes. The tapes really helped when it was time for my oral."
-- Larry Houston, Park City,
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