Definition
The pilot actions taken inside the cockpit when an in-flight emergency occurs, including identifying the problem, applying the manufacturer's checklist or memory items, configuring the airplane appropriately, communicating with air traffic control, and preparing the airplane and occupants for a possible forced landing.
Plain English
The steps a pilot carries out from the cockpit when something goes wrong in flight — figuring out what happened, working through the right checklist, setting up the airplane, talking to ATC, and getting ready in case a landing has to be made off-airport.
Context Anchor
Seen in emergency training, checklist use, and simulated emergency approaches and landings.
Derivation
"Flight deck" is the operating area where the pilots sit. The phrase points to actions handled from that station — as opposed to actions involving the cabin, passengers, or the airplane's external configuration alone.
Why Pilots Care
Correct and timely execution prevents loss of control and directly improves the chance of a survivable outcome in serious emergencies.
Intuition Check
Do not read procedures as casual tips. In this context, emergency flight deck procedures are the planned cockpit actions used to handle a serious situation safely and in the right order.
Example Sentence 1
After the engine lost power, the pilot ran the emergency flight deck procedures: best glide speed, field selected, restart attempt, mayday call, and passenger brief.
Example Sentence 2
During the preflight briefing the instructor reviewed the emergency flight deck procedures so the student could respond without hesitation to a simulated electrical failure.