Ailerongirl
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- Joined
- Sep 3, 2003
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- 874
Meow!PA-44Typed said:-No, just 8 times more likely to get a job then a man.
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Meow!PA-44Typed said:-No, just 8 times more likely to get a job then a man.
Also, the more a man looks like a woman, the better pilot he is.100LL... Again! said:Also, the more a woman loks like a man, the better pilot she is.
j/k
To be fair....I've had all of those things happen with MALE FO's numerous times. Not the same airports, but same situations. I have also had those things happen with FEMALE FO's. IMO, it doesn't happen any more frequently based on gender....it's based on overall experience.Chronic Jetlag said:I can only speak from personal experience and I'll give credit where credit is due. 1>Flying into LAX during rush hours, the PF (female pilot) after multiple runway changes turned the wrong way and would have landed on the wrong runway had I not intervened. 2>Climbing out of JFK and given an intermediate level off at FL 200, the PF (female pilot) blew through her altitude and I had to intervene. 3> Cleared for the visual into CVG landing north the PF (female pilot) was high and fast and I had to intervene.
In my opinion, that depends more on their personality than anything. There are those from both genders that get bent out of shape at the slightest thing, and those that are extremely laid back regardless of what's going on. I've flown with both types from both genders.AV1ATRX said:For what it's worth, it has been my observation that women generally are calmer in the cockpit. Men seem to get all uptight about the littlest things! I never have been able to figure that out...
Glad to know I'm not the only one.FN FAL said:I can laugh with what you are saying. Not because I am sexist, but because I think Andrew Dice Clay is funny.
Right, A Squared, thanks, I needed that. What was I thinking? Seems the blood just rushes from my brain when we are on this subject.A Squared said:No, not quite nosehair.
It just means that of all the pilot certificates 4.7% are held by women,
and that of all employed pilots, 4.2% are women
There's a couple of crucial pieces of data missing which would be needed to determine what percentage of all women pilots are employed.
If I have to guess, I would say that the percentage is approximately the same as it is for men, the percentage of all pilots who are women, is very close to the percentace of employed pilots who are women. Seems like the proportions carry through.
nosehair said:yet I still don't see female pilots just coming out to the airport, hangin' around, maybe renting an airplane to shoot some touch n' go's for the fun of it, or especially, owning an airplane just so you can polish it and play with it. You see any of that?
Hmmm...maybe this mentality was why I was looked at as though I had two heads when I went to go hang out at the local FBO this weekend.nosehair said:yet I still don't see female pilots just coming out to the airport, hangin' around,
well, I see a fair amount of it, but then my partner owns and maintains 2 airplanes of her own. I'm not sure that my experience is typical.nosehair said:Right, A Squared, thanks, I needed that. What was I thinking? Seems the blood just rushes from my brain when we are on this subject.
However, in regards to your "if I have to guess", I seem to see quite a bit more female commercial pilots these days than in times before, yet I still don't see female pilots just coming out to the airport, hangin' around, maybe renting an airplane to shoot some touch n' go's for the fun of it, or especially, owning an airplane just so you can polish it and play with it. You see any of that?
I am curious too. I'm a female charter pilot and judging by the voices I hear on the radio the percentage of female airline pilots is way more than the percentage of charter/corporate/fractional pilots.AV1ATRX said:In my limited experience, I've seen more female airline pilots than corporate pilots. I would like to see a breakdown of numbers in each category of professional flying.