• 热门标签

当前位置: 主页 > 航空资料 > 航空安全 >

时间:2010-07-02 13:40来源:蓝天飞行翻译 作者:admin
曝光台 注意防骗 网曝天猫店富美金盛家居专营店坑蒙拐骗欺诈消费者

Irrelevant or Unknown
560
133
169
90
821
24,349
23,528
4,453
2,149
1,356
891
7,449
157,922
150,473
3%
1%
1%
1%
5%
100%
95%
2%
1%
1%
0%
3%
100%
97%
2%
1%
ATC
Operational
Deviations
Inter-Facility
Coord'n
Problem
Intra-Facility
Coord'n
Problem
1993
1987 through 1993
Reported Incidents
ATC Handling Anomalies
ISSUE NO. 7
How do you spell…?
by Allen Amsbaugh How do you pronounce…?
And You Wanted to be a Flight Instructor?
by Marcia Patten
More Than Meets the Eye
by Marcia Patten & ASRS Analysts
Say What?
by Bob Matchette The ASRS
Database on
CD-ROM pg. 4
The Aviation Safety Reporting System is a cooperative program established by the Federal Aviation
Administration’s Office of the Assistant Administrator for System Safety, and administered by NASA
SEPTEMBER 1995


Issue Number 7 3
ASRS Directline is a publication
of the Aviation
Safety reporting System,
and complements ASRS’s
long-standing, awardwinning
publication
CALLBACK.
You are encouraged to
reproduce and redistribute
any of the articles
and information contained
in this publication.
We ask that you give
credit to Directline, the
authors of each article
and, of course, to the
ASRS.
If you have questions
or comments, drop us a
line—write to:
ASRS Directline Editor
NASA/ASRS
P.O. Box 189
Moffett Field, CA
94035-0189.
Charles Drew
ASRS Directline Editor
ASRS Directline
Issue Number 7
September, 1995
Readers will notice that Directline has been redesigned. We are always working
to make our publications more readable. We are grateful to David Faust of
the NASA-Ames Graphics Group for doing a great job of refining Directline’s
layout and providing graphics elements. We hope you like the new format.
Here are the articles contained in the seventh issue of ASRS Directline:
The ASRS Database on CD-ROM
4The ASRS database is now available
for personal computers. See
this notice to find out how you can
get your copy.
How do you spell…?
How do you pronounce…?
by Allen Amsbaugh
5Allen takes a look at the problems
with waypoint identifiers—
ASRS receives many reports about
navigational identifiers that sound
similar to other fixes, or whose pronunciation
seems to defy rational
spelling (or the other way around).
This article also contains some good
sidebar information on how navigational
fixes get their names, and how
ASRS deals with safety problems with
the Alert Bulletin and For Your Information
alerting messages.
And You Wanted to be a
Flight Instructor?
by Marcia Patten & ASRS Analysts
8This article is for instructors and
would-be instructors—regardless
of experience or whether the job is on
a Cessna 150 or a Boeing 747. Marcia,
with the assistance of ASRS’s experienced
cadre of pilot analysts, examines
the pitfalls of the job, with some
great advice on how to deal with the
problems, too. CRM for general aviation
instructors? See page 11 for more
information.
More Than Meets the Eye
by Marcia Patten
15A subject in a recent
CALLBACK issue, we
thought this one was important
enough to provide an expanded review
of the subject in Directline. Laser
light shows are posing some problems
for pilots; check out this article for the
latest information.
Say What?
by Robert Matchette
18Bob has done his usual excellent
research job—this
time examining non-standard phraseology
issues. This article looks at typical
phraseology issues on a flightphase
by flight-phase basis. (There’s a
good sidebar on one of the weirder results
of miscommunication, too.) Circulate
this article among your pilot
staff.
That’s all for the seventh issue of
ASRS Directline. We hope you find
theses articles useful and informative.
An Introduction
4 Issue Number 7
The ASRS database is widely regarded
as one of the world’s premier
sources of information on aviation
safety and human performance.
ASRS data is particularly useful for accident
prevention, procedures training,
LOFT scenario development, aviation
 
中国航空网 www.aero.cn
航空翻译 www.aviation.cn
本文链接地址:ASRS Directline(107)