B777 Qrh Exclusive [top] -
For pilots, simulator enthusiasts, and aviation collectors, the Boeing 777 Quick Reference Handbook (QRH)
The "Sneaky" Training
: Pilots often joke about flight instructors who "sneakily" disable the TAC system during simulator training. This forces the pilot to manually handle the massive asymmetrical thrust of a GE90 engine—the most powerful commercial engine ever built—turning a "benign" electronic process back into a raw, physical challenge. Famous 777 Recovery Incidents b777 qrh exclusive
- Purpose: The QRH condenses approved abnormal and emergency procedures into prioritized, flight-deck-friendly checklists that let crews stabilize the aircraft quickly and begin troubleshooting. It complements the Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM)/FOM and company-specific documents.
- Key principle: “Stop, think, act” — stabilize the aircraft and protect life and aircraft first; use QRH steps in the prescribed priority order.
- Context of use: QRH is used in-flight and on ground when the normal flows are interrupted by system failures, warnings, or emergencies.
Critical for the long stretches over the Pacific or Atlantic. Specific V-speeds: Purpose: The QRH condenses approved abnormal and emergency
Before we dive into rare procedures, understand the hierarchy. The B777 QRH is not linear; it is a matrix of failure modes. The "Exclusive" knowledge lies in knowing what the QRH doesn't explicitly state—the pilot-monitoring (PM) tasks and the automation reversion logic. Critical for the long stretches over the Pacific or Atlantic