Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
100

This person is responsible for fuel inventory, reconciliation, and ordering.

Line Service Supervisor (LSS)

100

This vehicle is used to re-supply the galleys with all of the food, drinks, utensils, napkins, trays and other amenities.

Catering Truck

100

The colour of jet fuel.

Colourless or light yellow (straw)

100

This can kill you very quickly before you know it!

Jet Blast

100

In cold temperatures you should periodically run vehicles stored outside for this reason.

To keep the oil from freezing

100

These Indicate areas that may be driven upon but not parked on. Exercise caution when driving on these.

Red Hatched Markings

200

This typical task is performed during both day shifts and night shifts.

Runway Inspections

200

The beacon colours of these service vehicles in order: Snow Removal Vehicles, Emergency Vehicles, Service Vehicles.

Blue, Red, Yellow

200

The bonding cable should never be attached to this.

The body of the aircraft.

200

These can kill you in seconds by getting sucked in.

Engine Intakes

200

During snow removal, dumping typically takes place on this taxiway.

C

200

Two solid yellow lines indicating the edge of aircraft load-bearing surfaces.

Taxi Side Stripe Markings

300

The customer service manager reports to this person. 

Airport Manager (AM)
300

Ground Power Units (GPU) can provide the following amounts of power.

1. 12 volts DC

2. 28 volts DC

3. 110/115 volts AC

300

This is designed to prevent any unmonitored fuelling.

Dead Man's Toe... I mean Switch*


300

If you don't take the proper procedures to scare these away, they can take down a plane, AND KILL YOU!

Birds

300

This action is required before using a Tapley Meter.

Calibration on a LEVEL surface

300

Three yellow inset lights spaced 1.5m apart. Inset across the intersection of taxiways or apron. Indicates a safe distance to hold from the intersection.

Taxiway Intersection Lights

400

This is the area designated for aircraft parking, loading and unloading.

Apron

400

The colour of each of these edge lightings of movement area surfaces in order: Runway Edges, Runway Thresholds, Taxiway Edges, & Apron/Taxiway Intersections.

White, Red/Green, Blue, Amber
400

This connects to the aircraft to neutralize the static charge between the two vehicles.

Grounding Cable

400

LMNOP in the phonetic alphabet 

Lima, Mike, November, Oscar, Papa

400

This is the ratio of the density of a substance to the density (mass of the same unit volume) of a reference substance.

Specific Gravity

400

Beacons must rotate or flash at a constant speed no more than __ times per minute (RPMs)

90

500

On the SMS Safety Report/Observation Form these four reasons for writing a report are listed.

1.Near Miss or Error

2.Hazardous Condition

3.Observation

4.Safety Concern

500

The pecking order in terms of who has the right-of-way.

1.Aircraft

2.Emergency Vehicles responding to an emergency

3.Maintenance vehicles conducting snow removal

4.Service vehicles

500

AVGAS can be fatal if it enter your airways. In such a case you should make sure to do this and definitely do not do this.

DO call poison control!

DO NOT induce vomiting

500
Calling someone FAT is rude... but in the flight line glossary it means this important message.

Fill All Tanks

500

This provides pilots with a description of the runway conditions so they can determine whether a takeoff/landing is possible and what techniques to use.


Aircraft Movement Surface Condition Report (AMSCR) & Canadian Runway Friction Index (CRFI)

500

Speed limits for the General Aviation North Area Apron

25km/h & 12km/hr (low visibility)