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~~~^~~~ said:Shamrock gave you some good advice there. Of course, make sure you have your passport, can't get in the sim ( post 9/11 ) without it.
Be professional, but easy going. Be the kind of person you would want to fly a month of 5 day trips with. Basic proficiency is expected, so what makes the difference between one pilot and another is attitude.
Are they doing all the interviews in the RJ Sim? They used to mix it up depending on what was available. The ATR is easier because it is similar to most round dial airplanes and it is such a dog that it is hard to over control the sim. Flap deployment is modelled poorly, so expect to go a dot high ( gain about 200 to 300 feet ) with each flap selection unless you get on the nose down trim and fly nose down 4 degrees, or so.
The RJ sim flies a lot like the real airplane. Lightning quick roll rate and much less sensitive in pitch. Using the pitch trim makes it easier to fly smoothly, but a newbie can get into PIO with the trim because there is a second or two delay. Imagine a nose heavy Bonanza and you kind of know what it is going to feel like. It is a swept wing airplane, so stay off the rudder.
Good luck - you should do fine - they need pilots right now.
~~~^~~~ said:Shamrock gave you some good advice there. Of course, make sure you have your passport, can't get in the sim ( post 9/11 ) without it.
AlwaysLearning said:Can you point to that rule? I attended training at my 121 airline without having ever had a passport and no big deal. ASA is the first place I have heard/talked to that flipped out about not having a passport.
There are 15 and 20 year captains here that dont have passports and go to training every year?
It may be ASA's rule, but it also ASA's interview. A good pilot with 121PIC, LOR from me and two Asst. Chief Pilots was turned down because he failed to bring his passport to his sim eval. Only trying to help by passing along the info.AlwaysLearning said:Can you point to that rule?
~~~^~~~ said:ASA is an international airline and you have to have a passport anyway to work here. They even made us ATR guys have one.
atrdriver said:You KNOW that's just so we could get into Alabama.
PingPong said:Hey everyone. I have an interview coming up with ASA. I've read the gouges and have stuldied my butt off. Just wondered if anyone has any last minute advice on what to expect. Thanks in advance....
AlwaysLearning said:Bite me, Ill get my passport when I need it. Always had an FCC license.
AlwaysLearning said:I had no attitude at all, I was simply curious as to the passport rule, then this tool comes along and TELLS me what I should have, I dug through part 61 and found no requirements for having a passport. No disrespect to anyone at ASA was intended.
But on a note, I did the phone interview with ASA and was sorely turned off by it. The passport thing was no biggie, it was already on its way, but what did turn me off was being asked if I had any SODAs for my medical, yes I do for color blindness. She then went on to tell me about how a captain upgrade washed out of training and blamed it on the fact that he was color blind.
First it shouldn't matter if I have a SODA or not, if there is no limitation on my medical or the SODA its a non issue. Second why is someone telling me, not an employee, about someone elses training problems. If that is the way things are run over there, no thank you.
Best of luck to you guys at ASA, but attitudes like the guy telling me to get a passport and then someone in HR telling tales of uprgrade failures, just gave me a bad feeling.
Tim47SIP said:I agree with you, it sounds like you're better off not coming to ASA. You would not be happy here.
Ifly's is right. You wont like it here. Most of the guys here would not want to have to listen to you for any length of time. Have fun wherever your interviews take you.![]()