A320 Flight Deck And Systems Briefing For Pilots -
Many of these briefings (depending on the edition) use simplified block diagrams or even hand-drawn style schematics. They are accurate but dated. A modern pilot used to iPad-based, interactive systems trainers may find the static, black-and-white diagrams a little underwhelming. A few color-coded hydraulic or electrical distribution diagrams would elevate it immensely.
The briefing’s best feature is its constant cross-referencing. A section on a hydraulic leak doesn't just say "lose green system." It reminds you: Green powers normal brakes, landing gear extension, and slats. If you lose green, you lose gear free-fall? No – free-fall is mechanical. But you lose normal braking – use alternate via the pedal switch. This integrated thinking is what separates a button-pusher from a real Airbus pilot. a320 flight deck and systems briefing for pilots
Most pilots know "ECAM tells you what to do." But why does it sometimes show an Advisory and other times a Warning ? The briefing dedicates a full chapter to ECAM prioritization, the concept of "Flight Phase" inhibiting, and the difference between a Status page and an Inoperative Systems page. It even includes a useful mnemonic for the "ECAM Actions" memory items – which are terrifyingly few, but critical (e.g., Stall, GPWS, ENG Fire). Many of these briefings (depending on the edition)
If you are about to step into an A320 simulator for the first time, read this twice: once to get the big picture, and once with a cockpit poster in front of you. It will not make you a captain overnight, but it will make you sound like you know what you are talking about on the first day of training. If you lose green, you lose gear free-fall
The briefing explains ECAM well but does not spend enough time on non-ECAM abnormal procedures (e.g., unreliable airspeed, severe turbulence, or a complete ADIRU failure). These are the "brain teasers" on a checkride. A dedicated chapter on "When ECAM Goes Silent" would be valuable.
Strong Buy – especially the latest digital edition (check for an index and hyperlinks). Pair it with a 3D cockpit app (like A320 Simulator by Aviations anytime), and you have a $30 training solution that rivals $500 ground schools.