B727FA
Bring your own FOD bucket
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2006
- Posts
- 635
"An AA 767 International flight generally goes out with nearly $500/hour in direct hourly FA costs. that's just salary. The cockpit gets paid about $430/hour in salary."
Easy tiger...Let's do the math if you really want to. Even with straight splits: INTL FD crew: CA, IRC and FO. Ignoring the CA is paid more: that's $143/hr for FD crew. Assuming FA staffing at 9 and, also ignoring Purser, LOD, etc pay, that's $55/hr for CC.
Nice try.
It always kills me when pilots are so quick to point out that it only takes a GED and a few weeks of training to do the job...and? Why should an FA earn that much? Why do you care? Seriously...why do pilots care? Labor cost is never the reason an airline fails--check out a little experiment called SkyBus--it's bad MGT.
FA's and their pay, work-rules, etc don't directly impact your QOL; so why is so much energy spent by pilots pointing out how inferior and non-career oriented the FA job is in both qualifications, training and status? We get it: you're all amazing!
Easy tiger...Let's do the math if you really want to. Even with straight splits: INTL FD crew: CA, IRC and FO. Ignoring the CA is paid more: that's $143/hr for FD crew. Assuming FA staffing at 9 and, also ignoring Purser, LOD, etc pay, that's $55/hr for CC.
Nice try.
It always kills me when pilots are so quick to point out that it only takes a GED and a few weeks of training to do the job...and? Why should an FA earn that much? Why do you care? Seriously...why do pilots care? Labor cost is never the reason an airline fails--check out a little experiment called SkyBus--it's bad MGT.
FA's and their pay, work-rules, etc don't directly impact your QOL; so why is so much energy spent by pilots pointing out how inferior and non-career oriented the FA job is in both qualifications, training and status? We get it: you're all amazing!