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Those you dont care about upgrade obviously want to work to 65. Think about this. If United mergers with anyone they will have overlap. Overlap means they are not going to keep that frequency in. This also means any old airframes will be weeded out of both carriers. Then you want to add in Uniteds great scope clause (not) and you can almost garuntee that you will see many of those EMB 175s or 190s (in the future) doing the roots of the old small narrowbody jets that they got rid of. Let somone else take the risk with buying new airframes like Chatauqua. Airtran is a growth airline that has slots in many every major hub. Think about that. If they get bought a few years down the road and you have seniority you may end up quite well in a shuffle if not you will still upgrade faster which means you dont have to work forever. I would rather be a captain on an okay day making good money than an FO having a great day making crap.
absolutely NO REGRETS! I liked my regional better than your place...and as far as our scabs go...they know their place yours'....hell they run your training dept. and all you ever hear is the famous "back at eastern" line. Screw that ********************. I won't hurt ya'lls feelns anymore though by saying such negative stuff.
170's = pretty much the same thing as the 175's right? Or am i mistaken?
late 30's.
F.O. with 18 months in.
Discuss:
Interesting question. I used the stats from Airline Pilot Central and came up with the following
Assumptions:
25 years of flying remaining
Earn minimum guarantee
United 65 hours, Air Tran 70 hours
Air Tran: 3 years as FO, then Upgrade
United: 5 years 737 FO, 5 years 75/76 FO, 5 years A320 CA, 5 Years 75/76, 5 Years 777 CA
Air Tran Earnings: $2,809,800
United Earnings: 2,468,700
I realize this is oversimplified, but an apples to apples comparison shows you make more $ at Air Tran.
Now consider that Air Tran is growing, United is not.
You are also more likely to become much more senior at Air Tran than you evel will at United, allowing for better QOL.
If it were me, I think I'd stay at Air Tran.
I'm pretty sure that our rigs and work rules exceed UAL's, even after the recent LOA. UAL does have the advantage with reserve work rules, but I think that's about it. Our B-fund is higher, but UAL also has a C-fund. In the end, it all pretty much balances out, especially when you figure in that upgrade here is about half of what it will be for a newhire at UAL. UAL has the widebody international flying for those that care about such things, so that's something else to consider. Basically, the money will probably end up being a wash, even including work rules and retirement, so you should probably make your decision based on something other than money. Domiciles, equipment, job security, etc... are all things to consider. If I was a regional guy and had a job offer from each of them, I'd probably take UAL, but as someone already with an AAI number, I wouldn't give it up.Don't forget rigs and retirement contributions.
Also, negotiation power....
UAL has the widebody international flying for those that care about such things,
I'd rather fly my fancied up -9 from here to CLT. Twelve hours in an airplane? No thanks. But to each his own.I'm sure that flying the heavy Iron around the world and making good money doing it is something not much people care about![]()
I'd rather fly my fancied up -9 from here to CLT. Twelve hours in an airplane? No thanks. But to each his own.
I'm pretty sure that our rigs and work rules exceed UAL's, even after the recent LOA. UAL does have the advantage with reserve work rules, but I think that's about it. Our B-fund is higher, but UAL also has a C-fund. In the end, it all pretty much balances out, especially when you figure in that upgrade here is about half of what it will be for a newhire at UAL. UAL has the widebody international flying for those that care about such things, so that's something else to consider. Basically, the money will probably end up being a wash, even including work rules and retirement, so you should probably make your decision based on something other than money. Domiciles, equipment, job security, etc... are all things to consider. If I was a regional guy and had a job offer from each of them, I'd probably take UAL, but as someone already with an AAI number, I wouldn't give it up.
If, Thats a big IF you are senior enough to hold that schedule as a captain then you have it pretty good. 95% don't12 hours with a nice long break in a bunk. 1 leg. several 4 course meals served with a multiday layover at a 5 star hotel at the other end. Fly back and spend more days off per month with your family or whatever doing what you want because your trips are more productive allowing you to only have to go to work 3-4 times a month. You are right though, to each his/her own.
IAHERJ