Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

ASA Capt Brian Wilson

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
Does anyone remember BW's story about your family getting killed in a plane crash because your buddy did not do his Jepp revisions?
 
He dates back to when the training department was called the "Hitler Youth." All that was required to get in there was a distaste for line flying and a healthy sense of superiority over line pilots.

A few of those guys moved over and are now in Delta training, by the way.....
 
Jan 1st AvWeek letter to editor by: ASA Capt. Brian Wilson:

Delta's Unrealistic Pilots

Regarding Delta Air Lines and its pilots in the 1990's, despite clear trends showing the impact of low-cost airlines on the profits of mainline carriers, organized labor continued to negotiate and/or extort extravagant packages from management.

For instance, according to a 2001 study by the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, Delta pilots enjoyed an average month of only 41 hr. of flying. Compare this to Southwest Airlines pilots, who flew 61 hr. out of the 100 hr. a month allowed by the FAA. Southwest pilot were 50% more productive. If the average Delta pilot flew only 6 hr. per day out of the maximum 8 hr. allowed by the FAA, he/she worked seven days a month in 2001. I don't know too many businesses that could survive with this level of productivity. Questions that will help determine the future of mainline carriers are:

Will Delta's pilots understand the role they played to bring the airline to this point?

Will organized labor in the airlines learn the lessons of history in their industry?

Will ALPA pilots negotiate within market realities?

I am not hopeful.

Signed, Capt. Brian Wilson ASA, ATL
 
I remember when he was an EMB120 instructor, didn't have the seniority to hold Captain, but by whatever method, got hired as an IP with zero PIC line flying time.

I can think of at least one other management wannabe FO to IP story, who also likes to write the occasional "You bad, bad naughty silly pilots" article.

No one at ASA outside the GO takes any of them seriously.

Niether should the Delta pilots.
 
If anyone on this board is acquainted with this @$$hole....pass on this message. The Delta pilot's just added his name to "the list", you know the one...the list that those RJ Defense guys are on.

Remember those right?

The Delta pilots have a list?

The plaintiffs have a list too. It's called discovery demands and apparently, the Delta pilots have yet to produce "the list" you speak of.

Dezi: Loo-cy, you got some splainin' to do!

Lucy: Whaaaaa...
 
Last edited:
Jeesh - don't tell me the Kellog School of Management at Northwestern University doesn't realize the difference between scheduling at an airline dominated by international operations with very long legs and a 737 operator running high frequency domestic operations. After all, if it all about most block flown in a month then Fed Ex and UPS's international operations must be a real money loser (yeah right).

Unfortunately schools like these mint out MBA's who don't know the difference either - who think that the secret to running an airline is simply finding some new paradigm that makes the mathmatical model work out.

Delta's problem wasn't its pilots. Delta's economic failure was the direct result of the decision to turn control of the airline over to inexperienced managers who basically did not understand how to run an airline.

I attended a meeting where Fred Reid was proudly proclaiming that Delta could borrow against its strong balance sheet to simply out last the competition. It was that sort of profligate mentality that ran Delta straight to the bankruptcy Court.
 
Last edited:
I left ASA a few years ago. When I was there this guy was in Crew Planning or something. I didn't know that he was a pilot, much less a Captain of anything.


Brian is a Check Aiman at ASA working under Tom Sorrell. He is an emotional idiot and has always been known for long diatribes on various subjects and all stir up shiite. He's harmless. I wouldn't waste too much time worrying or responding to him. Give him credit for putting his name on it. We do still have the right of free speech.
 
I attended a meeting where Fred Reid was proudly proclaiming that Delta could borrow against its strong balance sheet to simply out last the competition. It was that sort of profligate mentality that ran Delta straight to the bankruptcy Court.


that is a great summation of what drove Delta into BK. Mullin, Reid, Burns, et al, thought just that. Borrow enough money to outlast the competition, and also outlast the cycle. The believed to their core that things would get right back to normal after a couple of years.

I think the truth was the airline industry had already started a huge change prior to 9/11, and the trauma of 9/11 allowed these fools to blame forces other than market forces for Delta's decline. Remember, Delta had lost money for 1 or 2 quarters prior to 9/11.

They did not face up to real change until it was too late.
 
I remember when he was an EMB120 instructor, didn't have the seniority to hold Captain, but by whatever method, got hired as an IP with zero PIC line flying time.

I can think of at least one other management wannabe FO to IP story, who also likes to write the occasional "You bad, bad naughty silly pilots" article.

No one at ASA outside the GO takes any of them seriously.

Niether should the Delta pilots.


I heard he posts on Flightinfo as a Delta 737 pilot.
 

Latest posts

Latest resources

Back
Top