General Lee
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2002
- Posts
- 20,442
So says the guy who sounds like a broken record.
If the truth hurts...(just admit that I am right and I will move on, probably)
Bye Bye--General Lee
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So says the guy who sounds like a broken record.
I know two people who left Delta and have now been flying with SWA for about a year.
One was a 9 year JFK Based International B-767 FO.
Another was a 25 Year International B-767 Captain. He retired early to protect his A fund and came to SWA at the age of 56 to pull the gear.
Flying heavies international can only go so far. The way you are treated by your company, your pay, and your QOL are much more important.
Some think it is better at Delta, some think it is better at SWA. However, I do find it ironic that 2 tenured Delta Pilots left to come to SWA because they stated that Delta "was a lost cause." Who knows if they will be right in the end.
>>1. You will fly a 737 the rest of your career (or until you get 787s...no orders yet)<<
Probably not, but I wish it would be true. I've got 23 different aircraft types logged. The smaller ones were the most fun. After you've put in a decade or two you realize that an airplane is an airplane and enough familiarity to only need a half hour review before a PC is nice.
>>2. You will fly multiple leg days<<
We can fly long haul or short. I have found as someone who still enjoys flying that the arrivals and departures are the most interesting and make the day go by fast. The only time I find myself droning along looking at the clock is on a long boring cruise.
>>3. You will fly only domestic (no INTL cities yet, and Kelly said ATA would do INTL to Europe)<<
I've flown Europe and S. America. Got old fast. Got caught in 9/11 and gave thanks for being on the right side of the border. I also ended up in a hospital one time and was equally glad of being where I was.
>>4. You will do 25 min turns<<
As opposed to sitting on your butt for chump change perdiem? Sitting is far more fatiguing than flying and flying pays much better. When you were growing up did you tell your third grade teacher you wanted to sit in airports for a living? Our quick turns are one of our best quality of life features.
>>5. There is a chance you will see LBB, AMA, and MAF<<
I have never had a flow restriction, ground stop, holding pattern, or even held out for a gate at any one of those places. Never been more than number two for arrival or departure either. Usually on a PM arrival the controller will clear you for the visual from 40 miles and clear you to land and to the gate at the same time. Talk about stress and hassle free flying. Nice clean hotels, friendly people, and great food at huge discounts. What exactly is the problem again?
Great responses. You have proven my point. Southwest flying can be described I guess as *yawn*. Thanks.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Wow, impressive. 23 type ratings. And, you think an airplane is an airplane? Okay, see if you think that way after a few more years on the 737. You will be yearning for something different. And will you get 787s? I doubt it, but maybe---if you guys are allowed to change the cockpit forever and ruin it for every other airline---like the 737NGs....thanks for that. (you guys love switches, not push buttons)
You fly long haul and short. Well, your long haul flights USUALLY have an extra tag on to it, like PHL--LAX---and then onto LAS. SWA wants you to fly to the max everyday. That could be great, except that you are tired unless you are Superman. You might be able to do that as a youngster, but not after 50 years old. You are probably done mentally after the 6 hour leg from PHL--LAX. Don't say you aren't.....
Got old fast going to Europe and South America, eh? I would expect you to say that, since you now fly for Southwest. If you said "I really miss the great layovers in Europe" then you couldn't debate me. Our INTL hotels are the best in our system, and the destinations are sweet. Maybe you went to some real poop holes, but most of ours are NICE (like Nice, France). Can you say anything bad about Nice? I bet you could, but then again you frequent ELP often probably. If you get sick in an INTL city there are protocols to help our crews. The station managers are briefed on all of that. Security is also very good. If you get mugged in Barcelona, you probably got mugged in Vegas or New York too.
We don't sit around too much anymore, especially at ATL, where we used to sit for 3 hours at a time. We got better softwear or something that now limits us to about an hour between flights, and ATL just opened an extra runway (10/28) that has helped reduce holding etc, and we have PRM approaches too that keeps things moving. (all of this at ATL, the busiest hub in the world with the most passengers by far, and Delta has 70% of the traffic there) INTL flights have no wait times at all. You sign in, meet with the other crew members and talk about the tracks you will be flying and look at the charts, and then get your Starbucks and go to the plane. A first class meal is waiting for you.
LBB, AMA, and MAF sound really boring. It is great that you enjoy it, though.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Most Delta domestic has very few legs though after farming the small thin routes to RJ's.
Unless things have dramatically changed at Mother Delta for bottom feeder pilots (read: junior guys), I don't know how you can make that statement. When I was an ATL M88B back in 2005, 4-5 legs a day was pretty normal for us. We were in and out of ATL all day and night. While we may have had 45-55 min turns, they were eaten up by pulling into A-1, and going out on D-35 in ATL. Those BHM and JAN layovers were really great too.
BTW, what is the Kracker Kremlin telling new-hires for length of time to upgrade to the left seat? This hasn't been talked about very much by you, or the General.
Unless things have dramatically changed at Mother Delta for bottom feeder pilots (read: junior guys), I don't know how you can make that statement. When I was an ATL M88B back in 2005, 4-5 legs a day was pretty normal for us. We were in and out of ATL all day and night. While we may have had 45-55 min turns, they were eaten up by pulling into A-1, and going out on D-35 in ATL. Those BHM and JAN layovers were really great too.
BTW, what is the Kracker Kremlin telling new-hires for length of time to upgrade to the left seat? This hasn't been talked about very much by you, or the General.
Unless things have dramatically changed at Mother Delta for bottom feeder pilots (read: junior guys), I don't know how you can make that statement. When I was an ATL M88B back in 2005, 4-5 legs a day was pretty normal for us. We were in and out of ATL all day and night. While we may have had 45-55 min turns, they were eaten up by pulling into A-1, and going out on D-35 in ATL. Those BHM and JAN layovers were really great too.
BTW, what is the Kracker Kremlin telling new-hires for length of time to upgrade to the left seat? This hasn't been talked about very much by you, or the General.
Those beginning with SWA now will not be flying the B-737 at the end of their career.
Within this year SWA will announce an order for B-787's. You heard it here first.
Another way for prospective SWA/DELTA pilots to look at this equation is; even as attractive as SWA's payrates are right now, it would only take a 20% pay increase and Delta Pilots are suddenly the highest paid pilots in the U.S.A. (this includes Cargo haulers).
For B-777 Captains yes that would be the case. But there are very very very few B-777 Captains at Delta. As for the rest of the fleet that would NOT be the case.
A 20% Payraise fleet wide would still mean the narrowbody pilots are paid below SWA. A 20% Raise for a DAL B-737-800 Captain means they are making $181 an hour. Still less than a 12 year SWA Captain.
Here's the kind of trip a junior (200ish out of 250ish) guy like me gets in our most senior base.
Day 1:
DAL - STL (50 min turn, the worst part of the trip)
STL - TPA (25 min turn)
TPA - FLL (19 hrs on the beach) Total duty day 7:35
Day 2:
FLL - BNA (25 min turn. Plenty of time to run into the terminal for pasta w/ pesto sauce)
BNA - LAS (17 hr layover) Total duty day 7:35
Day 3:
LAS - SAT (25 min turn)
SAT - DAL Home by 1500.
Whew, man I'm exhausted!
The horror, the horror........
You surrendered your retirement in the last war. What do you have to surrender for the next war?
Stress is what is ultimately fatiguing and job security is the ultimate quality of life.
UNFORTUNATELY, there are a lot of pilots in our industry, especially those who Don't Ever Lose That Attitude, who are one Middle Eastern tussle away from cratering. I would find that stressful in a way that a few first class meals and fancy euro hotels aren't going to mitigate.
At least when you're sitting 20 back in the conga line at ATL making jokes about the little "AirTran" guy ahead of you, you might cut him some slack since he's going to be higher paid than you and could very well be interviewing you for a job someday.