AirCobra
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2006
- Posts
- 4,575
You guys need a new toy.![]()
Probably true about 2,000 posts ago but now I just let my freak flag fly. Interesting what you learn about people when they can say stuff anonymously.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You guys need a new toy.![]()
or.. Because many are the typical "yes" "get the mission done" types that have a hard time learning to fly the contract and uphold the cba. Seen it too many times.
Then 4000 hours of sitting in the right seat is no replacement for someone who spent 1500 hours with their hands and feet on the controls.
bingo!
You are correct about hand flying time being important and more and more becoming a lost art. But I have to disagree with your perception of RJ flying. 4000 hrs of rt seat RJ time equats to 2000 hrs of hands on flying in and out of a combination of high density and small, non precision approach type airports in all kinds of weather. That's why the RJ pilots often have have exceptional instrument flying skills. I don't disagree that military pilots get excellent training and a lot of experience in fewer hours. I just disagree that one or the other is "better"
Wave, we have plenty of both mil and civ at Hawaiian and I haven't seen anything of the negative about mil you see at SWA. The ex mil folks are awesome, great to fly with and I can't think of one that I would call "cocky". They bring to the table great experience and a strong desire to learn about civil ops, which is easy for them to do as they have proven they can handle "learning" very well.
I have to wonder if yours and other SWA comments about mil and in particular PHX mil pilots, is a by product of SWA's culture more than a statement of mil pilots in general.
RJ's fly at 100kts? That's news to me...
T-38's Do a lot of flying in crappy weather, under time pressure, for 12 hr days, 4 days in a row, dealing with incompetent support staff, MEL's up the wazoo, etc, etc.
The training argument is stupid. There is NO training that prepares one for Regional flying. It's something you learn as you do it in real time.
There are terrible civvie pilots and terrible mil. pilots. Who cares about generalities??? Just deal with the person you're sitting next to today.
Problem is, I was just as "unqualified" but capable at 2000 hours just like the mil guys- with few type ratings and years of 121 under my belt-
Nobody would accept a civilian like that-
as opposed to your sense of entitlment because of all the hard work you have done in your career that these gov't service people never did, is that what we are hearing? That you have given so much more of yourself that anyone in the service ever did? You should get your union to vote to only hire 1 militarty pilot per class, you should bring it up at your next meeting, the unfairness of it all.
You are correct about hand flying time being important and more and more becoming a lost art. But I have to disagree with your perception of RJ flying. 4000 hrs of rt seat RJ time equats to 2000 hrs of hands on flying in and out of a combination of high density and small, non precision approach type airports in all kinds of weather. That's why the RJ pilots often have have exceptional instrument flying skills. I don't disagree that military pilots get excellent training and a lot of experience in fewer hours. I just disagree that one or the other is "better"
Wave, we have plenty of both mil and civ at Hawaiian and I haven't seen anything of the negative about mil you see at SWA. The ex mil folks are awesome, great to fly with and I can't think of one that I would call "cocky". They bring to the table great experience and a strong desire to learn about civil ops, which is easy for them to do as they have proven they can handle "learning" very well.
I have to wonder if yours and other SWA comments about mil and in particular PHX mil pilots, is a by product of SWA's culture more than a statement of mil pilots in general.
Lamenting low time in the seat next to you isn't the sole provence of the civ world.