Home » Airline pilot explains why the co-pilot is more important than the captain on a plane and why he would rather have a good co-pilot than a good #2 engine any day

Airline pilot explains why the co-pilot is more important than the captain on a plane and why he would rather have a good co-pilot than a good #2 engine any day

by Till Daisd
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‘Co-pilots are absolutely essential to airline safety. I would rather have a good co-pilot than a good #2 engine any day,’ Randy Duncan, airline pilot

In aviation, the first officer (FO) is the second pilot (also referred to as the co-pilot) of an aircraft. The first officer is second-in-command of the aircraft to the captain, who is the legal commander. In the event of incapacitation of the captain, the first officer will assume command of the aircraft.

But besides that, what does a co-pilot do on a plane?

‘That’s a good question,’ Randy Duncan, airline pilot, says on Quora.

‘I think the co-pilot is more important than the captain (and I’m a captain)!

‘The job of the co-pilot at my airline is far more difficult than mine. Her workload on the ground is very, very high. She reviews the flight plan and weather with me and consults with me about fuel, route, and mechanical issues. When she’s done with that she does the walk-around inspection, sets up the cockpit for the flight which includes setting the pressurization, loading the computers with our route of flight, runway for takeoff and departure procedure, and arrival procedure. She tests all the systems that need testing and sets the instruments, checks the fuel load against the gallons loaded, checks the hydraulic, O2, oil, and other levels. Reviews the logbook for maintenance issues and recurring problems. If something’s not right, catering, fueling, lavatory service, cabin cleaning, passenger boarding, external power; she calls someone on the radio to get it fixed. She interfaces with the flight attendants and mechanics about issues that arise during boarding. She gets our ATC clearance and checks it against what was loaded in the computer, sets the transponder and radio frequencies for taxi and takeoff. Then she reads a checklist to me and I just see that everything she’s done is done. Whew, that’s just the stuff before we even close the door!

‘For pushback and taxi, she has to keep tabs on the radios and calls for all the clearances and talks to ATC. She also has to start the engines and run the after-start checklist and taxi checklist. She has a lot of switches and knobs to manipulate as she does her flows for each checklist. She monitors the route of the airplane as I taxi it to the runway. She makes a PA announcement to the passengers when we’re about to take off. If we are taxiing on one engine, she starts the second engine before we get to the end of the runway. Right before takeoff, she runs the before-takeoff checklist.

‘Then, it it’s her leg, she flies the airplane and I talk on the radios.

‘After landing, it’s more of the same. She does all the work, and I just taxi the airplane.

‘Okay, so we’ve established that a co-pilot does most of the work.’

Duncan continues;

‘Now the important part.

‘A good co-pilot monitors the captain and informs the captain if she observes any problems. If the captain is unresponsive, she makes a more intense suggestion. If the airplane is in danger and the captain is unresponsive, she takes control of the airplane and returns it to a safe condition. She is invaluable and ever since the industry empowered co-pilots with both responsibility and authority, the number of crashes has fallen to almost zero. there used to be a “Captain’s Authority” concept that made the captain solely responsible for the safety of the airplane and the final authority but that’s long gone.

‘The law is still on the books but the FAA has not pursued a violation in decades. It’s a dead regulation and it’s not enforced nor will it be. Today, co-pilots are given violations along with captains for misconduct of a flight. That means the captains no longer have sole responsibility. Since they no longer have sole responsibility, they also no longer have full authority either.

‘I know a lot of captain’s really treasured that old concept because it was a huge ego booster but it’s not that way anymore and I’m glad it’s not. The cockpit is far more democratic and an empowered co-pilot is a huge reason for the industries amazing safety record.’

Duncan concludes;

‘Co-pilots are absolutely essential to airline safety. I would rather have a good co-pilot than a good #2 engine any day.’

Photo by: Algkalv (talk) via Wikipedia and Unknown via Quora

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