weekendwarrior
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2002
- Posts
- 271
If you like to continue to fly FW, and still have a burning desire to serve and fly helo's, you might consider joining the Guard. This way you get the best of both worlds. Military flight school on your resume as posted previously, some (not alot) of flight time. Multi-turbine time (60,64,47) as recognized by some companies, but not all. (US customs is my goal, and they count 100% multi time for helo guys)
You'll spend a year and half training, come out with about 200 hours time, and you got PAID to put rotocraft instrument onto your commercial. If you don't like it, you are stuck for 6 years of guard duty, instead of stuck somewhere active you don't want to be (unless you get deployed of course, which is likely in todays world, but not forever).
So the way I look at my decision, it cost me 1 1/2 years of my life training, during a time when the aviation jobs really suck, and it's hard to build time. I got paid better than I would as a CFI for this time. I got a rotor instrumentrating in the process which equates to ALOT of money. I have rotor to fall back on if I don't find a FW job. I get to fly a cool aircraft on the weekend. And best of all, I go home at night.
Some people will knock the guard, but IMHO, it's the best part time job flying you can get. All the WO's that are in my unit got out of active for all these reasons, and enjoy flying Army much more now, since it's not a full time BS commitment that others have stated here with Army aviation.
As far as FW transition is concerned, it will be weird at first with pedal control. There are some fixed wing habbits that won't die, but I worked through them eventually. You will be miles ahead of eveyone else. Radios, patterns, navigation, instruments, etc. I'm in instruments now and am coasting through it with a 95 average with no problems, due to most of it being a review (and it's building more IFR time, too).
Whatever your choice, best of luck.
You'll spend a year and half training, come out with about 200 hours time, and you got PAID to put rotocraft instrument onto your commercial. If you don't like it, you are stuck for 6 years of guard duty, instead of stuck somewhere active you don't want to be (unless you get deployed of course, which is likely in todays world, but not forever).
So the way I look at my decision, it cost me 1 1/2 years of my life training, during a time when the aviation jobs really suck, and it's hard to build time. I got paid better than I would as a CFI for this time. I got a rotor instrumentrating in the process which equates to ALOT of money. I have rotor to fall back on if I don't find a FW job. I get to fly a cool aircraft on the weekend. And best of all, I go home at night.
Some people will knock the guard, but IMHO, it's the best part time job flying you can get. All the WO's that are in my unit got out of active for all these reasons, and enjoy flying Army much more now, since it's not a full time BS commitment that others have stated here with Army aviation.
As far as FW transition is concerned, it will be weird at first with pedal control. There are some fixed wing habbits that won't die, but I worked through them eventually. You will be miles ahead of eveyone else. Radios, patterns, navigation, instruments, etc. I'm in instruments now and am coasting through it with a 95 average with no problems, due to most of it being a review (and it's building more IFR time, too).
Whatever your choice, best of luck.