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breaking into the corparate market?

  • Thread starter Thread starter captain
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Any 121 driver can pass a checkride at Flight Safety but I dont think the same thing can be said about alot of corporate guys transitioning to 121. If we are talking about who has the most challenging job..............try flying a metro, single pilot in the northeast, winter, no autopilot..........nuf said.................
 
Any 121 driver can pass a checkride at Flight Safety but I dont think the same thing can be said about alot of corporate guys transitioning to 121. If we are talking about who has the most challenging job..............try flying a metro, single pilot in the northeast, winter, no autopilot..........nuf said.................

And I'm sure with an amazing resume like that, any corporate operator would be thrilled to have you come in a teach them how completely superior all 121 pilots are... Or maybe you would just be another 121 tool that any corporate operator would instantly regret hiring because he could not STFU about how great he is and how great it was flying the big metro in the snow...

It's funny. We're all just making the same point again and again. Corporate and airline operations require different skill sets (as said by Caveman). The question about why corporate operators do not always like to hire from the 121 world has nothing to do with skill, it has to do with attitude. 121 conditions people to have bad attitudes (bad management, bad contract, bad schedule etc). People with strength of character can come through that and not be d@cks but most people come through that as absolute tools so... Why take the chance. 121 pilots (like all pilots) are their own worst enemys...
 
I think the point about a 121 pilot passing a part 91 checkride at FSI, vs. a part 91 pilot passing a 121 checkride, is a valid one.

At FSI, you're a paying client - the company has a vested interest in getting you through the course. If you can't meet standards you can't meet standards, but there's sometimes the TCEs have a little latitude and a real-world checking perspective that allows people to pass who probably wouldn't with a ASI observing.

On the other hand, 121 training is anal-retentive. They expect your callouts & verbage to be 100% from the FOM/GOM/etc. and jump your sh!t if they aren't. There is very little lattitude afforded to probationary pilots doing their initial checkride.

Most any 91 pilot should be able to pass a 121 check with flying colors...but we all know some who wouldn't be able to.
 
Any 121 driver can pass a checkride at Flight Safety but I dont think the same thing can be said about alot of corporate guys transitioning to 121. If we are talking about who has the most challenging job..............try flying a metro, single pilot in the northeast, winter, no autopilot..........nuf said.................




Is that your badge of honor?

Because mine is more like working 6 days a month and making about 8X what a single pilot metro pilot would make.....and hell, staying landing current? now THERE'S a real challenge.

nuf said.

(just dragging this out...)

:)
 
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where is the original poster? this was pure flame and we all bought it

You've got to love FI for wasting time and arguing about nothing with a bunch of people who really don't care anyway... The interwebs is a beautiful thing, ain't it?
 
Any 121 driver can pass a checkride at Flight Safety but I dont think the same thing can be said about alot of corporate guys transitioning to 121. If we are talking about who has the most challenging job..............try flying a metro, single pilot in the northeast, winter, no autopilot..........nuf said.................

really, so my FAR 135 single pilot checkrides in a Citation don't count.
 
amazing how may furloughed-from-the-major guys are "ready to come back to their roots" in Corporate Aviation

once they get recalled, or the next job comes along, see ya. Roots? See ya

All about me baby, all about me

Come on, satpak, we've both been on this board and in this business long enough to know there's a huge disparity on the QOL scale in corporate departments (and now in the airlines). You expect someone to pass up a better situation regardless of whether it's corporate or airline (or crop dusting for that matter...)? Anyone here willing to pass on a F900 job with a schedule and Stanton pay to stay at a Hawker job with no schedule and "regional based pay"? Why is that different than someone leaving corporate for the airlines?

Why are there no negative comments about corporate pilots who went to the airlines then returned to corporate? They're out there--there's at least one on this board. I sure don't hold it against him.

"...all about me." Yes, it is. Because I've never had anyone else looking out for my interests. There is no shortage of people in corporate aviation willing to stick a knife in your back to improve their positon. At least in the airline world, you know who's out to screw you--management and your union.

Once again, someone's trying to pound a square peg into the round hole.

I'll be the first to agree with G200's comment about airline pilots and customer service. I tried hard to avoid that attitude. (BUT, a couple of the biggest slackers I've ever met were in a 91 department. You just never know.)

In aviation, you find out fairly quickly who you can trust with a job recommendation (or to do the job) and who you can't trust in any situation. Trying to draw a line between the segments of the industry in that respect is a mistake.

TC

P.S.--Happy Thanksgiving All! :D
 
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Actually, one of the best gigs I've seen is a guy that comes up to the midwest to crop dust for a month or two a year and makes $100k+/yr. Bottom line is; are you happy with your job?
 
It's all in the work ethic and professionalism.:beer:

Ding Ding Ding, best reply of the thread.

No connections or internal recs here, it was my professionalism, work ethic and attitude that got me here.
 
Any 121 driver can pass a checkride at Flight Safety but I dont think the same thing can be said about alot of corporate guys transitioning to 121. ..
Well I have passed both without issue and I'm a lousy pilot.

Both types of flying present thier own challenges, 121 flying seemed easier only because the leg work was done for me. Corporate is easy now only because I work 200 hours a year.

What ever happened to the "chief pilot" that started this thread?
 
I have all bases covered, so my phone should be ringing off the hook. I am a two time furloughed 121 guy. I have a pretty fair amount of 91 corporate flying as a contract pilot. Being furloughed, I am now the chief pilot of my own private Ford Fusion. Anybody want my resume. I got extras!
 

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