Lol, it’s funny how people always want what they don’t have. Little boat guys want a 40’ sportfisher, the guy in that wants to downsize to something fun that he can handle himself in shallow water. Flat girls want store bought, “blessed” girls want a reduction, etc. I’ve spent most of my career at FL something or other and the average flight time is 12hrs. and of course dragging my 182 out of the hangar at my somewhat deserted uncontrolled home field is way better. People ask me “don’t you want a twin, a retract at least?” hell no, gear down and welded, fuel on both, window open, perfect.
But back to your question for what it’s worth in the world of “heavy iron” here is the short list of what we do that separates the professionals from the $100 hamburger run.
1. Checklists, ours are challenge and response but you were right, make yourself always use it, it will make bigger planes easier, the Apollo moon mission guys called their checklist the “fourth crewman.”
If you curious we do a before start, after start, before takeoff, after takeoff, decent, before landing, after landing, shutdown. It doesn’t have to huge either, our after takeoff for example is gears up, flaps up, and cabin is pressurizing and it’s done silently, guy flying calls “flaps up, after takeoff checklist” and once the other guy checks those 3 things he says “after takeoff checklist complete.”
2. We brief everything. For departure this is taxi route, the SID, a route check, and most importantly the plan if it all goes to hell in a hand basket whether before rotation or after, for yourself if your going cross country, verify your routing if your plane has some kind of enroute fms, if not then on a chart. where would you go along the route if there is a problem, have you checked destination notams, I once flew to my favorite hamburger spot to find out they started repaving the runway that day, humbling. And most important what minimum altitude do you need to see on your altimeter to safely preform a turn back, (this has killed a LOT of pilots over the years) if below that alt. what’s the plan? There are many places we go that when we are 2nd or so in line for departure we will say out loud. “ok, if all else fails, regardless of the problem we will turn LEFT away from the ridge line” it might be night, IFR, whatever, but we’re aware of the specific threats and make sure everyone in the cockpit thoroughly understands the plan. we never roll down a runway without being cocked for a problem, you shouldn’t either.
3. We have a very defined line of what we can and can’t do and don’t break it. We’re professionals meaning we get paid and don’t succumb to “get homeitis” everyone behind the door has a meeting to go to, soccer game to see, a birth of a grand daughter, etc, etc. but why were safe is because we are paid to be just that. The mins on the approach are the mins on the GD approach, if we are truly tired send somebody else, fuels looking tight, land before it’s a full blown emergency, if the planes broke it gets fixed, period.
4. We train, incessantly. that means systems review, weather, flying, even in your Cessna, what to do if alternator light is on, flaps will not go down, do you have an idea of power and pitch would give you a good approach speed if your pitot boom clogged, if you have ever thought of something that’s nagging you in the back of your brain that starts with “what if” then go practice with an instructor and practice it before it actually happens.
Anyhow, hope this helps, your getting more out of that 172 than you know, easily tossed around, a low power to weight ratio, even strong gusty conditions on ground require attention, there is plenty to learn from it that a “big plane” will not teach you.