bigfssguy wrote:I just want to ask all the pilots out there a question. Why is it so difficult for pilots to read back clearances in some semblence of order like how it was passed to them by FSS. Is there a reason why?
Human beings can't multitask. We do have the ability to switch our attention from one task to the next very quickly but we cannot multitask and maintain the same level of performance compared to being dedicated to one task. Otherwise we could drive and talk on our cell, we could read something and listen to someone, watch TV without ignoring our wife, and write down a clearance while starting an engine, calculating fuel, listening to a flight attendant, wondering why the clearance is different than filed, wondering why the prick beside you is staring at you, and the list goes on. I understand that while you're in your FSS station there are often multiple events occurring at the same time that will require your attention, but it's different. In the flight deck you are confined to a small space that has multiple stimulus
designed to grab your attention, you also have a lot of background noise (fans, chimes, passengers, cabin crew ect which are distracting as well. Finally you're looking at your OFP and seeing what is filed, then being cleared something entirely different is a distraction too. Compound this with our industries total disregard for fatigue and laughable duty limits and I think you have an answer.
Pilots are humans, we make mistakes, we get tired, we are not computers that can multitask without error (exception: Cat. Who can read back a CX in morse code while hand proping a turbine, being serviced by the cute FA, and correcting GPS coordinates with his sexton because that's how they were
taught in the olden days) eventually we'll get it right, be off your freq, and pissing off the next ATCer with our inability to listen and respond, we'll do that all the way to the pub.