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Airnet or Airlines?

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ricketmt said:
To the original poster,

I worked at Airnet for a little while. I liked the job. I had a 13 hr duty day and worked 5 days a week, on a run that started at 11:30 am till 1am in the morning or later most nights. I was making nearly $38,000. I learned a great deal and the experience made me a better pilot.

But-I would never choose that job again. There is something to be said for the adventure of it, but it is a dangerous job no if and's or buts. It will also burn you out. You have no time to socialize, get home, and you will have to move for this job. By the time you are done with a five day run you are just recovering on the weekend.

I now work at CHQ. I live where I'm based. I choose reserve to get the days off that I want and have great QOL. I did take a large paycut (for now), but I earned every penny at Airnet and probably a few more. Don't chase the money, do what comes natural to you and the rest will follow. Airnet is a great company, but it is not for everyone. I do miss the freedom of my own little "ship", and a few other things, but I am much happier with my current job.

As for Airnet and its training contract. Don't worry about it. It is uninforable. If you don't like a job just move on, you won't hurt their feelings that is business, and just have them try and come after you. I had them forward all correspondance to a lawyer and never heard a word from them about the contract.

I'm not saying that is right or wrong but I had to leave. I was not happy with the job and found a way out. So the moral of my post, do what makes you happy. If you are young and single and low time, Airnet is great. If you have family obligations like me, maybe its not the right choice.

A few things here that make me upset reading this. And yes, I work with Airnet. No, I do not work with HR or Pilot Recruitment. But, I like Airnet and cannot stand when I hear people making statements that misrepresent the comapny or what we do.

First of all, the job we do at Airnet is in no way dangerous or unsafe. Not once did I ever feel my life, aircraft or feeling of safety was in jeopardy. I want examples about how anyone can claim this as being dangerous. Sure, we will fly an 1800 RVR approach down to the minimums. Sure, we will attempt a landing beyond the max demonstarted crosswind component for the plane. Sure we will dodge thunderstorms to get to the destination. But, the 121 boys/gals to the same thing day after day and no one claims they are dangerous. 135 has nearly the same regulations that 121 does. We are in no way a dangerous company and in fact, we have an impecable safety record from the last 30 years.

As far as the training agreement....don't come here if you cannot serve a year. A year is really not a long time in the grand scheme of things. By the way, CHQ has a two-year training agreement and I am surprised that their HR department would consider a pilot who bailed on another agreement. Airnet, CHQ and any other company with a training agreement has them to keep down training costs. If you sign for a year, commit to a year. And for those bashing the freight companies....just stop! I can only speak for Airnet and I can honestly, 100% say, we are not dangerous!
 
Airnet is Safe

The company is safe. The job is dangerous. To think otherwise is stupid.
Personal example. Most of the planes I flew had no radar. I was struck by lighting once, no serious damage but the plane was done for the day (radome cracked). Everytime you fly all day in the clouds with no wx radar is a bit hairy. No autopilots in my planes either, not dangerous, just added to fatigue and decreased margins of safety on long hard days. Extreme windshear on final approach during approach of a thunderstorm. Etc... Etc... Most of you at Airnet are to cool to admit to have ever been scared but one of my the guys at my base had an experience that scares me just thinking of it. Fire in the cockpit (electrical) at night, in IMC. Lost electric and was thankfully able to get under cloud deck and make a landing before all went too bad. Another friend had an engine failure, not as scary but these things do happen. Bad things do happen to good pilots, no matter how safe you play it, even if you are not punching through the flashing red.

As for training contracts they are crap. If you are a good company you will get and retain good people, which Airnet does. Those that want to stay do so. Those that don't leave. They don't need the training contract they just need to hire the right people and not blow smoke up your ass in the interview.

I was in no way bashing Airnet. It is a good company and a good choice for a good many guys, just not me and I was not afraid to move on. I believe Airnet will be around for awhile, but it is not growing and the only way that you all are moving up is do to others moving on.

Hmm
 
ricketmt said:
The company is safe. The job is dangerous. To think otherwise is stupid.
Personal example. Most of the planes I flew had no radar. I was struck by lighting once, no serious damage but the plane was done for the day (radome cracked). Everytime you fly all day in the clouds with no wx radar is a bit hairy. No autopilots in my planes either, not dangerous, just added to fatigue and decreased margins of safety on long hard days. Extreme windshear on final approach during approach of a thunderstorm. Etc... Etc... Most of you at Airnet are to cool to admit to have ever been scared but one of my the guys at my base had an experience that scares me just thinking of it. Fire in the cockpit (electrical) at night, in IMC. Lost electric and was thankfully able to get under cloud deck and make a landing before all went too bad. Another friend had an engine failure, not as scary but these things do happen. Bad things do happen to good pilots, no matter how safe you play it, even if you are not punching through the flashing red.

As for training contracts they are crap. If you are a good company you will get and retain good people, which Airnet does. Those that want to stay do so. Those that don't leave. They don't need the training contract they just need to hire the right people and not blow smoke up your ass in the interview.

I was in no way bashing Airnet. It is a good company and a good choice for a good many guys, just not me and I was not afraid to move on. I believe Airnet will be around for awhile, but it is not growing and the only way that you all are moving up is do to others moving on.

Hmm

Flying without radar is not dangerous. I flew over 1000 hours as a flight instructor, in the clouds as a CFI-I with no radar. Never once did I feel it was dangerous. What I did was check the radar before departing, use Flight Watch and FSS along the way and always made a successful flight with minimal turbulence. I still do the same at Airnet when I don't have radar.

Landing in extreme windshear?! You are an idiot if you did that. In my last 14 months at Airnet I have diverted three or four times due to windshear and no one has questioned me or pressured me otherwise. In addition to those diversions, I have enetered holding patterns and waited for the storm to pass. If you conduct your flights in a dangerous manner, it is no one else's fault but yours.

As far as ever being scared....I have never been scared at Airnet. I have not had any terrible emergencies and I count my blessings everyday for that. I have had gear problems and nearly had an engine failure, but is an engine failure really a scary, dangerous event?! There have been times when I was flying in icing conditions that I was concerned about continuing the flight, but I always paid close attention to my surrounding environment and always escaped the conditions before it got to the point of scaring me. Airnet and the job itself are not scary unless you make stupid decisions. If you treat it like any other flying job and realize that you are PIC and no one can help you, the job is safe and it is fun.
 
EXACTLY.... You are the PIC; make decisions like a PIC. If the weather is bad at the field, go hold at a near-by fix. To continue an approach with known windshear in excess is stupid and unsafe. From your stories I can tell you flew 310s out of BHM. Thats the South East buddy. I was there in the South for a year and a half and let me tell you I learned a lot about radar use and thunderstorms. Probably the same experience that you are using today with CHQ; which is great. Its probably good that you will be a Co-pilot for a little longer so you can learn more so next time you're the PIC you aren't lacking in confidence. And you'll have 5 shiny glass screens to show you everything thats going on.

Now back to the topic of AirNet and Airlines. If FedEx projections of 400 pilots per year for the next few years, UPS with 250 pilots, JetBlue 250-300, Southwest 250-300 and Continental wanting 850 pilots by 2008.. i'd say the 30 or so pilots that want to leave AirNet will have a shot. I'm sure some of us lowly 135 pigs will make it to somewhere of the above mentioned. In the past we have had PICs leave for sweet 91 or 135 corporate companies also. So not all of us working at AirNet have dreams of the Big Iron.

Right now its still a choosers market. They have thousands of furloughed pilots with 121 time and experience in types that they fly. There are also the PICs from the regionals that have been sitting in the left seat for 4 years or so waiting for things to rebound from 9-11.

In conclusion (sounds like a term paper!) if you come to AirNet for the one year or stay for 5+ years to get your time, you will enjoy your stay here. If you're not having fun here, then this place is just not for you... Its all what you make of your stay!

(Reaching in my fridge for a cold one....) Cheers :cool:
 
As much as I'd like to jump in here, I won't.


I will however say this. The training agreement is there because of the trend that can be seen in the youngsters of today in that they have a degraded sense of accountability. It used to be that the one year commitment was nothing more than a gentleman's agreement with a handshake. Those were the days when people would come in to get all of the baron/aerostar/whatever training for free and then bail out within a month or two. I even heard a story about a Jetride pilot (back when it was still in its infancy as opposed to the toddlerhood of today) who hired on, got the free Learjet type rating, and resigned after THREE WEEKS! I kid you not, THREE WEEKS! It costs money to train these pilots, and for all of those who say that training agreements are a joke, consider this. How would YOU like it if you hired me for a job and paid over $7k to train me for it only to see me bail out on you after 2 months with not so much as a second thought?

My point exactly. Now someone gimme a beer.
 
How's the Turbine PIC coming?

Wings421

Good buddy! Hows things with you? I see in your profile you're on the 140. Is that in STL? If so, thats great! Take care and keep in touch.
 
Yep, the 140's are in STL. Lots of time off! LOVE working days again. Things are going great, but miss the flying at AirNet time to time.
 
Wings 421,

Glad to hear your enjoying regionals and the day schedule. I finally made the jump after 7 months on the jet. I'm in SLC finishing my last 2 days with AirNet flying our newly positioned SLC based run. I start groundschool with SkyWest Thursday morning. Maybe I'll see ya around.

Purvis
 
328,

Sounds like a good move for you. Time off in Colorado. Gotta like that! Did you ever go 8/6 at AirNet or did you take a run out of APA? Good luck in training and enjoy flying in the daytime. Hope to see you around.
 

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