Syberg`s at Dorsett and I-270
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Syberg`s at Dorsett and I-270
Syberg’s at Dorsett and I-270 Registration Cost $400 Call or Email Scott Sorel to Sign Up & Attend Scott.Sorel@ehi.com (314) 601-1046 Tuesday January 14 0900-1200 Dann Runik of FSI: Energy ManagementStabalized Approahces and Rejected Takeoff- the Go / No Go Decision Lunch – Syberg’s 1300-1500 John Salamankas of Gulfstream: 1200-1300 Manufacturer Test Pilot Wednesday January 15 0800-1200 Chris Lutat of Convergent Automation Airmanship Performance: – Syberg’s 1300-1500 Quay C. Snyder, MD, MSPH of AMAS – Virtual Flight Surgeons 1530–1800 Happy Hour – Syberg’s Bar 1200-1300 Lunch Thursday January 16 0800-1200 Erik Eliel of Radar Training International: Airborne Radar Refresher Course 1200-1300 1300-1500 GSLBAA Luncheon Erik Eliel of Radar Training International: Arrival threats and Accident investigation Morning Session 0900-1200 Dann Runik of Flight Safety International Dann will present two different courses: • Energy Management-avoiding landing over runs starts in planning the arrival and approach- techniques to stabIlized approaches • Rejected Takeoff- the Go / No Go Decision- a new philosophy regarding the decision making process and statistics of rejected takeoff success or failure Lunch 1200-1300 Afternoon Session 1300-1500 at Syberg’s (provided) John Salamankas of Gulfstream Aircraft Gulfstream test pilot will speak about aircraft performance, runway over runs, stabilized approach concept and overall safety Morning Session 0800-1200 Chris Lutat of Convergent Performance Automation Airmanship: The cockpit of today’s modern aircraft are more complicated and demanding of our attention than ever before. Technology designed to reduce the pilot workload has been proven to multiple the complexity of the job if not used properly. Chris explains the difference between using the technology professionally and being overwhelmed by the systems. Lunch 1200-1300 Afternoon Session 1300-1500 at Syberg’s (provided) Quay C. Snyder, M.D., M.S.P.H. Dr. Quay Snyder, President/CEO of Aviation Medicine Advisory Service and Aeromedical Advisor for the Air Line Pilots Association, International will present a pilot-focused interactive seminar designed to help pilots protect their FAA pilot medical certificates, thus preserving careers while optimizing health and improving safety. Happy Hour 1530-1800 A happy hour directly following the presentation in the Syberg’s bar for all attendees Morning Session 0800-1200 Erik Eliel, Radar Training International Radar Refresher Course This course is a review of the major topics taught in the full day initial radar course. Pilots who take Erik’s course are usually amazed at how much they learn about a piece of equipment which has been in their aircraft for their whole career. Lunch 1200-1300 at Syberg’s (provided) GSLBAA luncheon Afternoon Session 1300-1500 Erik Eliel, Radar Training International Arrival threats, approach lighting systems and a look at specific aircraft accidents to learn what can be avoided and how to better prepare ourselves for safe flights. Dann is the Manager of OEM & Customer Relations for Flight Safety International. He works out of the Savannah center and teaches a number of courses there and on location. Dann is also a 747 captain for a major U.S. airline. Dann was approached by Gulfstream to put together a course featuring Gulfstream’s latest philosophy on the rejected takeoff. It is different from what has become the norm. We have been taught to stop the takeoff if the anomaly happens at low speed and continue up to decision speed unless one of a few named anomalies happens. Many flight crews have decided to reject takeoffs in perfectly flyable aircraft with very poor, sometimes tragic results. Dann will explain why it is best to plan go instead of not go. Many of today’s accidents are happening during the landing phase of flight with a runway overrun resulting from an unstable approach. The stable approach happens when the flight crew plans to have the aircraft set up properly before the approach begins. Dann’s program “Energy Management” takes a look at setting up for a good landing early in the arrival phase of flight. It also looks at what the flight crew can do to avoid pitfalls which can cause the unstable approach. John Salamankas is the Flight Operations Safety Manager of Gulfstream Aircraft company. John has been a long time demo and test pilot with Gulfstream and now also speaks to groups about safety in flight. John is based at the Gulfstream factory in Savannah Georgia. John will speak to safety in flight as it relates to proper approach and landing technique, flying stabilized approaches and believing that making the decision to go around is much better than forcing a poor approach in to a disastrous landing. John also speaks to his years of experience in aircraft testing, predelivery test flights and aircraft development. Captain Lutat has been a leader in helping organizations worldwide adapt to the demands of highly automated aircraft, and originated the concept of “Automation Airmanship®” in 2004, and is co-author of “Automation Airmanship: 9 Principles of Glass Cockpit Airmanship” (McGraw-Hill, 2013). He has presented the concept at industry forums in North America, Europe and Australia. Captain Lutat is a 1985 graduate of the U. S. Coast Guard Academy, and has served aboard cutters and air stations across the US during his 10 years of service. As a Coast Guard Search and Rescue pilot, instructor and check airman, he accumulated over 3,000 flight hours in the Dassault Falcon 20G. He was among the initial cadre of Coast Guard Aviators to bring Crew Resource Management to Coast Guard Aviation. Captain Lutat has been a commercial pilot and Captain for a large global airline since 1995, where he serves as a Captain, instructor and check airman on the Boeing MD-11. He has experience operating the B-727 (First Officer) and DC-10 (Flight Engineer). He has designed safety courseware, advanced technology flight crew interfaces and procedures for civil and military customers since 1995. In 2003 he was among the original founding partners of Convergent Performance, LLC. Contact: Captain Chris Lutat; Ph. 901-830-0939 email: clutat@convergentperformance.com web: www.convergentperformance.com Automation Airmanship for Business Aviation will present the 9 Principles of Automation Airmanship developed by the author over the past decade of work in the industry with organizations operating or transitioning to advanced aircraft. The course is an update over previous years’ seminars, with specific emphasis on the skills and habits of expert performers in glass cockpit aircraft. Participants regardless of the aircraft they fly, will learn the fundamentals of glass cockpit organization in a way that will permanently change their view of flight deck automation, simplifying the complexity and demystifying the “differences” between manufacturer designs. The 4-hour course takes participants through each principle, providing examples of skills and techniques which can be applied immediately upon course completion, on the individual pilot's very next flight. The seminar is an unconventional approach to dealing with conventional challenges on the automated flight deck, putting into practice skills related to recent findings from the research community in the field of human performance. Rather than focusing on failures and accidents, the course emphasizes expert performance, discussing examples from industry of crews demonstrating expert “Automation Airmanship”. . Dr. Snyder is President/CEO and co-founder of Virtual Flight Surgeons, Inc. and its division, Aviation Medicine Advisory Service (AMAS), an organization dedicated to aviation safety, pilot health and career preservation. He is a graduate of the United States Air Force Academy and Duke University School of Medicine. He has completed medical residencies in Family Practice and Aerospace Medicine and is board certified in specialties, as well as Occupational Medicine and Addiction Medicine. Dr. Snyder received his Master’s of Science Degree in Public Health from the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. He was named as the Air Line Pilots Assn Int’l. (ALPA) Aeromedical Advisor in January 2010. He spent 17 years in the active US Air Force as a flight surgeon and family practice physician. He was selected as his command’s Flight Surgeon of the Year on three separate occasions. Dr. Snyder also spent five years in the Colorado Air National Guard as a flight surgeon and Colorado State Air Surgeon. He retired from the USAF after a three year tour as the senior physician/flight surgeon at the USAF Air Reserve Personnel Center following his demobilization from Operations Noble Eagle/Enduring Freedom. Dr. Snyder is an Assistant Clinical Professor at the University of Colorado Health Science Center in the in the Department of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics and at the National Jewish Medical Center and Research Center in the Department of Occupational Medicine. He is also on the associate clinical faculty at the USAF School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks AFB, TX and the Boonshoots School of Medicine at Wright State University in Dayton, OH. Dr. Snyder is a commercial pilot, FAA certified flight instructor since 1975, an Aviation Safety Counselor for the FAA Denver FSDO and a FAA Designated Pilot Examiner. He has 2800+ flying hours in 48 types of aircraft from gliders to F-16’s. He formerly served as a glider instructor pilot and aerobatic / spin instructor at the US Air Force Academy’s 94th Flying Training Squadron. He is the recipient of the US Air Force Academy's award for the 94th Flying Training Squadron's Attached Instructor Pilot of the Year, 2000. He currently instructs for the Black Forest Soaring Society and owns a Schleicher ASW24B that he flies for long distance cross country glider flights. He has also earned the National Association of Flight Instructors (NAFI)/Society of Aviation and Flight Educators (SAFE) Master CFI Designation since 2003. Dr. Snyder is the author of more than 70 scientific papers and articles on medical issues in various scientific and professional pilot journals. He is the 1985 recipient of the Howard Unger Award given by the Society of USAF Flight Surgeons (Aerospace Medicine Association) for the outstanding published research paper in aerospace medicine and its 2008 General George Schaefer Award for lifetime achievement in Aerospace Medicine. In 2012, he was awarded the Aerospace medicine Associations Marie Marvingt for leadership and innovation in the field of aerospace medicine. He is a member of the Flight Safety Foundation's Business Advisory Committee and the NBAA’s Safety Committee. Dr. Snyder is a reviewer for the internationally renowned journal Aviation, Space and Environmental Medicine of the Aerospace Medicine Association. Participants will receive comprehensive information on standards, policies and procedures to obtain FAA certification waivers for many common medical conditions. They will also learn about hot topics of high interest to the FAA and potential risk to pilots as well as strategies for passing FAA medical exams. The seminar will cover the risks and benefits or “executive health exams” offered to many corporate pilots and types of insurance recommended to protect income with these programs. An outline of programs to assess the failing aviator – fitness for duty determinations – will be presented. Interactive case studies will illustrate medical certification problems routinely facing pilots with group determined solutions. Attendees will also have the opportunity to present individual cases in a public forum during the workshop and privately with Dr. Snyder following the group session. Pilots with specific concerns should bring any correspondence they have from the FAA Aeromedical Certification Division, their Regional Flight Surgeon or their AME for review by Dr. Snyder. Event Speaker Erik Eliel, Radar Training International Erik is a former U2 pilot, currently a pilot with a major U.S. airline. His interest with radar began in 1991 while flying airlift and transport missions to Europe, Africa, South America, and the Middle East. In 1997, Erik was selected to join the cadre of instructors at the Air Force Advanced Instrument School in San Antonio, Texas, teaching advanced instrument concepts to pilots representing all branches of the DOD, NASA, and Federal Law Enforcement agencies. It was here that Erik developed and taught the first-ever formal weather radar course for Air Force pilots. Radar Training International Inc. (RTI) was founded in 2004, and specializes in customized airborne weather radar seminars for Fortune 500 companies and the manufacturers of aircraft weather radar. Although the foundation of the seminar is anchored in the tactics, techniques and limitations of airborne weather radar, this program has evolved into a comprehensive convective weather program for pilots and now includes other critical topics such as human factors, risk management and properly integrating NEXRAD technology into the overall weather strategy. RTI’s program has been presented to pilots representing corporate flight departments, the Department of Defense, and aviation / owner-operator associations, as well as the dispatchers and meteorologists of aviation-related companies; industry safety seminars; and the pilots, engineers and marketing representatives of a major manufacturer of airborne weather radar. This increasingly popular program is commonly booked more than a year in advance for large venues, and the critiques consistently rank it as one of the most popular. RTI founder and president, Erik Eliel, is currently flying the Boeing 737 for a major airline, maintains his CFII and MEI ratings and has logged over 12,000 totally flying hours. From 1987 until 2001, Erik was an active duty Air Force pilot with assignments to the T-38, C-141 and U-2. His radar and weather-related articles have been published in the NBAA Journal of Business Aviation and in Business & Commercial Aviation. His input has also been solicited for safetyorientated publications such as the Flight Safety Foundation’s magazine AeroSafety World. His company maintains active memberships in multiple professional flying organizations including National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), and Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA). Venue Syberg's Dorsett 2430 Old Dorsett Rd Maryland Heights, MO 63043-2415 (314) 785-0481
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Syberg`s at Dorsett and I-270
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