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SoCo Guy
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2006
- Posts
- 821
I think the real fix is discipline, personal responsibility and integrity...all things that we can not write a rule for.
Or mommy and daddy can't pay for?
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I think the real fix is discipline, personal responsibility and integrity...all things that we can not write a rule for.
Hours do not determine a pilot's ability. The military tunes out very cable pilots who at 1000 hrs are very well qualified. However there is a screening process with some pretty tuff entrance requirements, tuff course completion standards, and a continuing training process. I see this same stupidity with airline and insurance hiring standards, no we can not hire that guy he only has 1100 hours, our mins are 1500. But this guy is all MEL TJ, he was an EC-135 A/C. Nope he is not qualified, but another applicant shows up with 1600 hours of 1350 are in a C-150, how there is the breakfast of champions for airline hiring. He is a sad process to hang everything on numbers.
Don't know of any majors that hire pilots whose majority flight experience is light cessna's, especially these days. I have done my time in the military as well as with the regional and majors. The military screening process isn't perfect as you seem to convey. As for a continuing training process, well that is a standard at all 121 and 135 airlines.
I wasn't talking majors, we were talking about the new 1500 hr mins to get into the regionals. My example was a guy they could not hire even though he was more qualiifed than hte 1500 SEL guy. By driving strickly to a number, with no one to chose from the 1500 SEL gets the job. BTW 121 and 135 do not train like the military. In the mil we had PQS sign ofs and qualifiaction boxes to check on almost every flight. Very rarely did you ever fly from point A t opoint B without completing a training evolution. The nwhe nyou became an AC you started being the guy giving hte training. I know it is not lijke tha in the 121 or 135 worlds where I have worked. six month checks or traiing, on occasionoal line observation. But mostly point A to point B flightsDon't know of any majors that hire pilots whose majority flight experience is light cessna's, especially these days. I have done my time in the military as well as with the regional and majors. The military screening process isn't perfect as you seem to convey. As for a continuing training process, well that is a standard at all 121 and 135 airlines.
None. It is only listed because schools like Embry Riddle are lobbying for it.
Actual cockpit experience, or nothing. We need to set a standard.
CFI time is not that different than pilot monitoring time at a carrier.
If a CFI cannot log the time, then regional FOs should not be able to either.
In fact, a CFII in actual has at least as much going on as a regional FO.
experience counts- but not as much as building a solid foundation. Teach responsibility and discipline. The academics in aviation are way too lax. It allows any undisciplined idiot to make it to the experience part of the game. We increase the academics, and those with the discipline and will power to get through it will make the industry safer.
no one here can argue for the ridiculous 3 choice memorization ritual known as our writtens. They are moronic.
If you're too dumb or lazy to get through a JAA type academic program- you shouldn't be flying.
If you don't like modeling after europeans - then let's model the academics in the civilian world after the US navy.
In summary the FAA is investigating the effect of enacting one or a combination of the following options:
1. Requirement for all pilots employed in part 121 air carrier operations to hold an
Airline Transport Pilot (ATP) certificate with the appropriate aircraft category, class,
and type rating, or meet the aeronautical experience requirements of an ATP
certificate.
2. Academic Training as a Substitute for Flight Hours Experience.
3. Endorsement for Air Carrier Operations
4. New additional authorization on an existing pilot certificate.
Not so. There is no evidence that the Europeans with their written exams have a better safety record that U.S. pilots.
The FAA didn't need to do anything in light of 3407, the public will get on anything that's painted the same as their Frequent Flyer Visa card.
CFI time is not that different than pilot monitoring time at a carrier.
If a CFI cannot log the time, then regional FOs should not be able to either.
In fact, a CFII in actual has at least as much going on as a regional FO.