Definition
The items carried aboard an aircraft to handle in-flight emergencies and to support the occupants if a forced landing or off-airport landing leaves them stranded. Emergency equipment generally addresses immediate hazards (fire extinguishers, first aid kits, emergency locator transmitters, life vests, life rafts, oxygen). Survival gear addresses sustaining life until rescue (signaling devices, water, food rations, shelter, suitable clothing for the terrain, fire-starting tools).
Plain English
The gear on board for dealing with an emergency in the air, and the supplies needed to stay alive on the ground after an unplanned landing in a remote area.
Context Anchor
Seen in training syllabi, preflight planning, aircraft checkout, and discussions about what equipment should be carried for the flight.
Why Pilots Care
Ensures pilots are prepared to respond effectively to unexpected situations, potentially preventing injury or loss of life.
Grounding Statement
Before a flight, the pilot should be able to point to the emergency items on board and know what each one is for.
Intuition Check
Do not think of this only as gear for a crash. In aviation, it also includes equipment used for fire, medical needs, forced landings, signaling for help, cold, water, terrain, or being stranded after landing.
Example Sentence 1
Before the cross-country flight over the mountains, the instructor reviewed the emergency equipment and survival gear stowed in the baggage compartment.
Example Sentence 2
The student pilot learned to inventory the emergency equipment and survival gear as part of every preflight inspection.