Definition
A complete pre-flight discussion in which the instructor or pilot-in-command covers every relevant element of the planned flight — including objectives, procedures, expected conditions, hazards, responsibilities, and emergency contingencies — so that all participants share a common understanding before the flight begins.
Plain English
A full talk-through of the flight before you go, covering what you're doing, what could go wrong, and who handles what — so nobody is surprised in the air.
Context Anchor
Used in flight training, preflight planning, crew coordination, and instructor risk management before a lesson or flight activity begins.
Derivation
‘Thorough’ comes from Old English ‘thuruh’, an older form of ‘through’, meaning ‘all the way through’. A thorough briefing is one that goes all the way through the flight — not just the highlights.
Why Pilots Care
Ensures all participants share the same picture of risks and actions, directly lowering the chance of miscommunication or overlooked hazards.
Intuition Check
Do not assume a thorough briefing means a long speech or a checklist readout. In this context, it means the briefing covers the important points needed for safe action and shared understanding.
Example Sentence 1
Before the cross-country lesson, the instructor gave a thorough briefing covering the route, weather, fuel plan, and what to do if the destination became unusable.
Example Sentence 2
Before engine start, the pilot performed a thorough briefing with the student on emergency procedures and go/no-go criteria.