Airlines hire military more because they are cheaper.
Cheaper to train, cheaper to keep, less likely to strike, tax deduction for hiring vets, etc.
Curious if you can back that up beyond simple opinion?
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Airlines hire military more because they are cheaper.
Cheaper to train, cheaper to keep, less likely to strike, tax deduction for hiring vets, etc.
Curious if you can back that up beyond simple opinion?
I too wonder about this one. Maybe disabled Vet's but not many airline pilots would fit in that category. I got two vets in our last class, I'll ask HR if there is such a thing.Also, I have to wonder if that's internet reality that hiring ex mil pilots give the airlines a tax break????
Is that why you guys have 12,000 foot runways?
Anyone can be a military pilot, the training is very good, it is just their entrance requirements make it hard to get a slot. Unless of course there is a war going and on and guys like me get a shot.
Wrong. If this were true you wouldn't have attrition in the Training Commands, and you wouldn't have guys getting FNAEB'd in the fleet for poor performance/decision making. The vetting is a never ending process.
We lost 50% of our AOCS class, and that's even before anyone touched an airplane.
What's your opinion against it? There is no hard study on any of this, just what I heard from my company.Curious if you can back that up beyond simple opinion?
I'm not saying it isn't a huge hurdle, but yip insinuates that it's the only hurdle to getting, and then keeping your wings.
We lost 50% of our AOCS class, and that's even before anyone touched an airplane.
I know from our experience the training failure rate for military trained pilots is far below that of the civilian source pilots that we have hired. The military's weeding out process eliminates a lot of guys in training; I would guess much more than a civilian training program.
As an Air Force pilot I can assure everyone I am the best pilot on the planet. And I am certainly far superior in every way to others that flew for the other branches of service.
After training it's a toss up dude.
I have landed in zero zero conditions, you have not, not counting Cat III auto pilot.
A few points:
#1....your not a military guy
#2....you went to a podunk local flight school
#3....you have low flight time because of being in the sim most of the time
#4....your begging to be hired but are having difficulty even though you think that your skills and "aviation upbringing" are a result of the best route anyone could ever take to a career in aviation....much like the military guys you are complaining about to begin with.
And exactly how much automation and guidance did you have to make that 0/0 landing?
.
After training and a year or so on the line.
Immediately after, haha, lol, no.
Not exactly sure why you would fly a PAR approach as down to 0/0 when its not intended for it. There are published minimums in the general section of the approach plate books.
The FPN63 and other PAR types I used were accurate to decision height though most of us would continue with advisory information to over landing threshold.
I'm low time? Coulda fooled me.
My sim time taught me that there is no difference between civil and military, or between Embry Riddle and local flight school. Every pilot is the sum total of their capabilities, motivation, and opportunities.
My path was no better or worse than anyone else's. I've met people who fly way better than me, and who fly way worse.
I think that military training is one very excellent way to go, having the additional benefit of not having to pay for the ratings.
However, like I said, military pilots (to a far greater degree than civilian pilots) just can't seem to let go of pointing to their pedigree. They NEED to be better. It's an ego thing. Now, I've met plenty of military pilots who think as I do - that it all depends on the individual.
Ever sit in the sim and watch a mid-time regional FO coaching his former-military sim partner through an approach? It happens.
It all depends on the pilot. Having better training is like having better genetics. It helps, but only to the extent you capitalize on it.
There is nothing more entertaining than a guy with no experience or street cred trying to argue a point.
Get back in your box. Literally.
Because you are allowed to shoot practice approaches, and if you just happen to get the runway in sight, and deem it safe to land, you can.
You know OPNAV prohibits practice approaches when the wx is below mins, right? For this very reason. Not that it probably matters anymore.
Dan, he's making generalizations about different groups of pilots having never actually flown with any of them. Sim instructing is not flying.
You know OPNAV prohibits practice approaches when the wx is below mins, right? For this very reason. Not that it probably matters anymore.
There is nothing more entertaining than a guy with no experience or street cred trying to argue a point.
Get back in your box. Literally.
It did back in the day, there where always minimums with PAR's.
Not saying, when the night was long, weather sucked, and fuel was on fumes, you did do what you had to do. Been there.
The kernel comment, not reserved fro military guys, in fact, it only applies to those self selected few who can't seem to get along, live let live, or cooperate and graduate. Every encounter with them is a test of wills. An ego thing. No need to be military to have that kernel moniker.
It didn't back in the day, I don't think, not 100% positive.
Zero automation, PAR.
Wrong, they try to make the QRH easy for everyone now and there are so few memory items also.
I would say it is more up to the individual on how they handle an emergency.
You know OPNAV prohibits practice approaches when the wx is below mins, right? For this very reason. Not that it probably matters anymore.
Dan, he's making generalizations about different groups of pilots having never actually flown with any of them. Sim instructing is not flying.