Vavso
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2001
- Posts
- 202
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I am wondering if they furloughed so they can finally buy the F.O.'s there own charts and app plates. "Borrowing "the captains so you can brief the approach and make notes about the approach plate on your TOLD card is archaic! Yes folks you get no charts as an F.O. !
Please tell me you're joking?
That's why they call them Great Lakes Mistakes.Please tell me you're joking?
Hi Yall this is fact . You are hand flying approaches with no auto pilot SOME FO sides have flight directors You brief the approach scribble notes from it onto a TOLD card and give it back to him .You then work as a team to fly the approach while he refers to the plate .
You have responsibilites that boggle the mind prior to taking off into the air and have very little time between turns to get things done including loading pax, pre flighting ,clearances , FA type duties , supervising baggage loading and to make matters worse verifying drift downs on the release are accurate using a pen and calculator via manual calculations sometimes all in 10 minutes time . Not to mention no lav on the 1900
NO SIC type rating - NO high altitude endorsement !
BOTTOM LINE :they will always find some fresh CFI with a wet CFI certificate looking for that "quick upgrade " and to wind up in a jet eventually which in reality is a very difficult mountain to climb. The dream of quick upgrade is a hard road to hoe possibly a fallacy .
Pilot community at GLA - great guys - hard working talented
Training department - great guys too
I have already said to much but I speak nothing but the truth
Yes, FO's don't have plates. What's the big deal? Review the plate and, carry on. Also, what's wrong with flying with no auto pilot? Did it when I was a freight dawg. Is it unsafe for all the freight guys flying chieftains or BE99?
Flyran15, let me guess you were one of the FO's I heard about at Xjet. 400ft, auto pilot ON, 200ft auto pilot OFF? I heard all about those dudes when I was there from other CA's. Afraid to hand fly, heaven forbid you turned off the FD and, went raw data.
Also, not all of your facts are correct. Yes, no pay during training, no per diem during training, they will fly you out if the city is served by GLA, we do get our rooms paid during training.
I am prepared for the flame but, it must be a slow day for the GLA bashing to begin again. None of what was posted is "new" news, been like that for awhile. That's why I am actively involved in our new union and, trying to effect changes.
PS Mesa Sucks (maybe that will get another thread started)
About 17-18 years ago, at Anniston Al, an airline crashed (don't recall the name) when they went MA off the LOC 05 and didn't make a turn to avoid terrain. The 1900 (I think) hit a small mountain instead. I believe the final report mentioned that this particular airline also had the one set of plates onboard policy. If I recall the FO was flying and didn't have the MA down, or the CA failed to give it to the FO in time, and they didn't turn when they were supposed to.
Hoser
Roll Tide!
Why not spend a few hours with a good copy machine and make yourself a set? Copyright infringement? Too much work to trim them and punch the holes just right?
As a current Lakes captain, I have a question: Where are you gonna put another set of plates? Seriously? Right now we're supposed to keep the following handy:
Jepps (4 inches)
Performance Manual Vol I (3 inches)
Performance Manual Vol II (3 inches)
QRH (1 inch)
FOM (3 inches)
FSM (3 inches)
TAWS manual (1 inch)
Aircraft Logbook
Less than half of that fits in the designated spot in the pedestal, the rest is shoved in any other nook or cranny to be found, behind seats, underneath short aviatrix's etc.
The connection between our furloughs and the Jepps is obvious flamebait, the reason we furloughed is because our leadership has the foresight of a three-toed sloth.
In know way am I defending the company, when my airline issued me plates as an FO I definitely felt more in the loop. It's cheapness, period, and our useless feds would rather persecute us for penny-ante administrative BS than fix real issues.
Further vavso, In reviewing your previous posts, you've discussed training problems in not one but two 121 initial programs. I don't think approach plates are the crux of the matter. I'm sorry it didn't work out here, we flush alot of good guys. Best of luck going forward.
Thus far in the thread no Lakes pilot has exhibited any chest-thumping machismo, let's keep it that way gentlemen.
The plates at XJT took up 3 2 inch binders alone. You can get it to fit in a chart case.
Nothing wrong with using automation .I am sure if the 1900 had it you would be using it . And its 600 feet a/p on on the crj .Great thing an a/p .I have seen plenty of guys hand fly the crj up to altitude .Then again they are not doing 6-9 legs a day . Fatigue factor is one reason having an A/P is actually safer.
When you were a fr8 dog how many legs did you do and how long was your duty day ?? out of curiosity .