Mach92
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2001
- Posts
- 315
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The legislation should have created a mandatory retirement age of 65 for ALL compensated flying: Part 91, 91K, 135 and 121.
How is it that the day you turn 60 (or 65) you can no longer safely fly a Southwest 737 but you can go down to Van Nuys or Vegas or wherever and jump onto a BBJ and go blasting around the world until you can't hold a medical or drop dead?
Let's either have one, across-the-board, consistent retirement age, or none at all.
Politics. Please don't wish the same regulated bull$hit on our sector of the industry as 121 has.
Reality Man:
Yes you have flown with someone over 65!!!!! Hehe!
Oh, and 208S....... I will challenge you to flying and RON'ing.
208S..........
What got me was your statement : "Every single one of the guys that were 67+ should not be flying."
I am one of those and thus my challenge.
I'll take flying with a 67 year old retired Delta Captain over a 300 hour riddle wonder kid any day of the week. When the $hit hits the fan, I want someone calm and collected over someone who is going to start throwing switches sitting next to me.
I only have 4000 hours. I'll take experience any day.
The retired guy has better storties too.
The legislation should have created a mandatory retirement age of 65 for ALL compensated flying: Part 91, 91K, 135 and 121.
How is it that the day you turn 60 (or 65) you can no longer safely fly a Southwest 737 but you can go down to Van Nuys or Vegas or wherever and jump onto a BBJ and go blasting around the world until you can't hold a medical or drop dead?
Let's either have one, across-the-board, consistent retirement age, or none at all.
I'll take flying with a 67 year old retired Delta Captain over a 300 hour riddle wonder kid any day of the week. When the $hit hits the fan, I want someone calm and collected over someone who is going to start throwing switches sitting next to me.
I only have 4000 hours. I'll take experience any day.
I'm not aware that NJA has a procedure set in stone for dealing with aging pilots who may be deteriorating. Having said that, I do know several of the older guys here recently have had to do some sort of "cognitive evaluation" by a professional to assess their capability to continue flying.
I hear ya. It's not unlike the double standard BS in supplemental O2 requirements between 135 and 121 just because of the Payne Stewart crash. What? 121 pilots have a longer useful consciousness than 135 pilots? Give me a break!
Whether or not a procedure is set in stone, do you guys have a way to report someone who may need an evaluation done? By saying this, I don't mean trying to bust the guy's (or gal's) chops, but with the level of liability involved, there should be a way to say something. What if you guys could report it to the union for them to track? If the union had 10 reports from 10 different members on the same person, they could go to the company and request the evaluation (or whatever it is that needs to be done). Again it shouldn't be about getting someone in trouble, it's about safety for everyone including the "geezer". After all, if anyone reading this post turns 70, can't see that your mental ability is deteriorating / slowing down, and can't handle the job, wouldn't you want someone to pull you out of the seat in your best interest?
SG
Yes. It's called the Pro Standards Committee. They are there to do exactly what you suggested. They track reports on pilots, and when they have enough (don't know how many that is) they will approach the pilot tactfully (I hope) about whatever the problem is, and go to the company too if necessary.
The Riddle Ace will panic and start touching stuff. The elderly gent will smile placidly, thank you for pointing out his error, finish his tapioca pudding, put his dentures back in, fly the ILS like he's on rails, and tell you about a time something similar happened except he was being shot at and in an inverted spin.
What bizzaro universe do you come from? I've seen both...Elmer Fudd and Chuck Yeager. I don't know how many retired pilots have been passed up in the interview process that crashed on the v1 cut.... even when they know its coming.
We do have something in place to deal with this....it's called a check ride. When they can't pass it, they are out.
What's a "stortie?"
My point to the previous poster is that age has nothing to do with performance. Saying that a young guy is going to panic has as much merit as saying the older guy will sail right through any problems. You are right, age has nothing to do with it. However, no amount of experince will make up for lack of skills...be it from lack of flight time or deterioration of skills over time.