Receive the passengers and secure the cabin for departure.
Receive the passengers, secure the cabin for taxi.
Sweep the cabin and prove every piece of safety kit is aboard — before the first passenger does.
An unbraked cart is a half-tonne projectile — lock the galley down before the aircraft moves.
Doors to automatic, cabin secure, crew on jumpseats — the cabin is ready the moment the tug pushes.
Doors to manual, cross-check, then an orderly deplaning — and straight into the turnaround.
The kit that keeps people alive — and how to use it without fumbling.
Pressure is gone, the masks have dropped — fit your own first.
Over the head, buckle, pull tight — and never inflate inside.
Auto-inflate fails? The red manual handle is your backup.
Power's gone, the PA's dead — the floor lights and your voice remain.
You're down and away from any airport — now the survival kit matters.
Arm, cross-check, assess and empty the cabin under the 90-second clock.
Arm the slide, then prove it — two crew, one cross-check.
Your voice is the tool that empties the cabin.
Get a full cabin out in ninety seconds — half the exits gone.
Set the cabin before impact — head down, hands on head, feet flat.
Self-help exits over the wing — brief the row, assess the exit.
Find the threat to life first and act before the ground can help.
A passenger has collapsed — find the threat to life first, in order.
Unresponsive, not breathing normally — compressions now, AED as soon as it arrives.
Pressure falls, judgement fails first — fit your own oxygen before you do anything else.
Most calls are not arrests — fainting, dizziness and feeling unwell. Handle them calmly.
Protect yourself first, isolate the case, and work the problem with the ground medical link.
Starve the fire, protect breathing, and beat thermal runaway.
Heat, fuel and oxygen — and the class that decides the agent.
Pull, Aim, Squeeze, Sweep — the only way to use the bottle.
Seal the hood before you fight — smoke kills faster than flame.
Find the source, attack the base, protect your breathing.
Cool it with water, never bury it, and watch for re-ignition.
Turbulence, unruly passengers, security threats and ditching.
Run the cart, watch the sign — and drop everything when the air turns rough.
Talk it down first — restrain only when there is no other way.
An unclaimed bag is not lost property — isolate it, don't touch it, tell the flight deck.
A bang, fog and falling masks — grab oxygen, get down, hold on.
Brace, then into the rafts — and never inflate a vest inside.