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Anyone know how to get into it? I've heard from some people that 1500+ hours are required and others that it's the most entry level position out there. What's the deal?
Good grief. Powerline flying or towing banners is NOT a job that requires you to have connections and letters of recommendation. The best thing you can do for yourself is show up at the door of the employer and talk to them in person. Most of the time the guy that gets hired is the one standing in front of the desk when the job comes open.
Pick up a copy of Trade A Plane. Between now and spring you'll see no end of people looking for someone to tow banners, and usually powerline patrol jobs come up too. A recent job was advertised for pilots in Cessnas to chase UAV's around in California...they're paying dirt poor wages and want low time pilots. Drop zones are always looking for pilots, especially on a summer-seasonal basis. Lots of places to go fly. Get on Climbto350.com, pick up Trade A Plane, or go to any number of other sources advertising for pilots.
And how dose one know that the job is going to be open so they can be the one standing in front of the desk when the job comes open? Usually by knowing someone that knows about it!
1-2 hundred feet all day with 60-90 degree banks is not really entry level flying.
You have to have 1,500 to be covered by insurance at one operator I know.
1-2 hundred feet all day with 60-90 degree banks
AVBUG read what I wrote, not what you think I wrote.....PIPELINE...... most turns are required due to some construction or other unexpected object/leak ect ect. I would go on but apparently you know it all already.
A serious mistake to one is a thorough inspection and delightful day to another.If you're doing 60 degree to 90 degree banks while flying pipeline patrol, you're making some serious mistakes. It's not exactly a hard charging or particuarly challenging line of work.
If I get that jaded in the future I will put a gun in my mouth.
Careful now. That's just enough to cost you your medical, you know. Mental instability.
Much like your delousions of an exciting life.
If you want to play drama queen and yank the airplane around unnecessarily, have a ball. Chances are you'll wind up in one, some day. I've spent a good share of my career beneath powerlines within a few feet of the ground in a number of different aircraft, invariably in mountainous terrain, generally under adverse conditions...and still don't see it as a great drama.
Perhaps you're young enough to be just that little bit arrogant and just that little bit adventurous that powerline or pipeline flying really is that exciting to you. Good for you. Enjoy it. The truth is you sound like the kids who start banner towing and proclaim it to be the most dangerous endevor in this lifetime. Such inexperienced claims are a little like listening to a ten year old with his new BMX bike proclaiming himself to be the baddest boy on the block. The problem is that nobody really cares, and the youthful exuberance is okay for the ten year old.
Not for you.
Get a grip. It's pipeline patrol (which really doesn't differ significantly from powerline patrol by the way...been there, done both)...not combat. I grew up flying in the rocky mountains, and unless you were raised in the flats of Kansas, it's just not that big a deal.
If you're doing 90 degree banks while flying your pipeline patrol, it's a sign of inexperience, poor piloting technique, and poor judgement and skill. At least you've endevored to make yourself known.
Yes, I have flown powerline and pipeline patrol, as well as other low level flying such as ag (crop dusting) and firefighting.
See my previous comments. Nothing has changed.
I've never done line patrol of any kind, but I have been very close to 90 deg. bank, if not there at well under 100' in the past. Time is money, and when you've got a time constraint in front of you minutes wasted in the air just don't work. For what it's worth, I never regarded it as dangerous as a knee jerk reaction. It was all fairly well calculated and it was something that you built up to. Besides, how else do you learn about top rudder?I get the feeling some people talk about 90 degrees banked turns (which would be ludricous at low level),
I get the feeling some people talk about 90 degrees banked turns (which would be ludricous at low level), yet other people actually seem to mean a turn of 90 degrees left or 90 degrees right, which would then be made with an appropriate bank of turn.
1-2 hundred feet all day with 60-90 degree banks is not really entry level flying.