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Don't bet on it. The last airline that hired the Airstage II guys sent every single one of them back. Not many made it through the interview and none made it through the IOE training. This is what I hear...feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
Timebuilder said:Correction: ATA . ACA is closed. That's the school that trained pilots and chefs in the same rounded building at Lakeland. I drove by it during Sun n Fun, and met two guys who are now working at PIE on old Tampa Bay.
Hey Martinfierro, glad to hear ATA works out for some. How long ago was that though? Maybe before the airlines were onto ATA's policy of logging PIC time? Wanna discuss that for the rest of the readers? I bet they'd get a big kick out of it, especially avbug! Question: How do 3 pilots log PIC time on the same flight in a light twin?
BTW, CoEx was the airline that sent everybody back, again according to what I heard, not necessarily fact.
I heard that the guys we got from ATA didn't do too well overall. I heard they were good guys, just was too hard to go right into the jet from a light twin. Go figure....
blah blah blah.172driver said:.... I routinely have problems affecting my safety with ATA planes in the practice area and around airports.
No use of the radio to announce position ....... Not illegal but unsafe, IMO. Also, not good training. Why not talk to ATC like everyone else...it's a big part of instrument flight.
172driver said:I did most of my initial training in the mountains in California where almost nobody had a radio and I didn't mind it a bit, so settle down. BTW, how many mountains (not east coast hills) have you flown in? That's real world.