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Bashing The Legacies

  • Thread starter Thread starter CaptainMark
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The_Russian said:
Well said Ty. I love you. Make love to me.

It is useless to resist me . . . . . . My tight polyester slacks and many gold zodiac medallions are quite, eh, how-you-say . . . . . intoxicating?



.
 
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SWA/FO said:
Not here at SWA... Why don't you visit airlinepilotpay.com and look for yourself, although I don't think its 100% right with its TPF (trips for pay conversion to hourly). If you look at airlinepilotpay under CARGO you will see Fed Ex lags behind ABX in pay. Have a nice day. :D

SWA/FO, I did just what you said and you are right about ABX. Funny thing is all the (large companies) CARGO guys make more than SWA. Add our B-fund and 50% A fund to that and wow you are way behind. As I said before Herb is a master... that makes you a puppet! All in fun!

I'll let someone else explain to you what the A and B funds are. I've got to rest and get ready for golf with CaptMark tomorrow.
 
Little?

CaptainMark said:
its amazing to me reading some of these threads that a lot of the LCC pilots bash the legacies...back when your airlines were not around the legacies set the bar for all of us..pay..workrules..retirements..etc...the contracts they fought for and got benefitted us all..now they are on hard times and the rest of us have to set the bar again...we are trying at fedex...i will not bash the legacy pilots and i hope nothing but the best for them...grow up

Since when did we start calling SWA a "little airline?" Doesn't the LCC SWA have more A/C than most Legacies?
AA-720
CO-338
DL-501
NW-447
UA-463

SWA-445 with 2006 deliveries of 33. Another 200 or so on order. This is not a little airline, but is a LCC.
 
Funny thing is all the (large companies) CARGO guys make more than SWA.

Memtrash,

Whats the point? You think that site factors in QOL? You think that site factors in profit sharing account or stock options? Doesn't really matter to me because I'M HAPPY WHERE I'M AT and it appears your happy where you are at.

I brought up ABX because I was wondering who was paid the best in the freight business. I was trying to figure out what you guys are after, there at Fed Ex and UPS as far as a contract, raise etc... You guys are like Oranges and we are Apples. You almost can't compare the two.
 
Innovations

scoreboard said:
Oh, and 60plus years of contributions to society from United? Not a flame, but name one please, enlighten us. Anything you name can be answered with "because it made United money"

1. First practical two-way radio
2. First reliable static-wick
3. Radio Altimeter
4. Gyro-stabilized auto-pilot
5. ILS
6. Weather radar
7. First airline to use electronic flight simulators
8. First to employ electronic computers to map out the safest and most fuel efficient route
9. First airline to install production-quality collision avoidance systems
10. It's DC-8's were the first to qualify under the FAA's all-weather landing program.
11. First female stewardesses
12. Elrey Jeppesen was a United Airlines pilot
...the list goes on and on...

Okay, maybe 7, 8, and 11 made them some money, but the rest were for the good of the industry.

I like SWA. I have lot's of friends there. UAL (and the other legacies) were around in a time when innovation meant safety and large technological leaps in the aviation industry, not just "we'll give them a cup of Coke instead of the whole can" or "I can get you from Houston to Harlingen for $39." They couldn't go to Boeing, Lockheed or Douglas and tell they wanted a DC-3 with dual ILS's a weather radar and GPWS. That stuff had to be invented. By the airlines. United for many years had a Boeing 247 that was converted to a flying laboratory to use developing and testing these new technologies. That's innovation.

Remember when you climb into your -700 that almost all the technology around you was pioneered by a legacy. One that sunk a LOT of money into developing that equipment so you and your passengers can get to point B safely. It's a shame hardly anyone remembers.

Just my $.02
 
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yeah, well we got the SNORT team, and NASA uses our data all the time!

Actually, I think we get a lot of stuff, info. from Fed Ex. It appears our management/training teams like eachother.
 
Sluggo_63 said:
1. First practical two-way radio
2. First reliable static-wick
3. Radio Altimeter

... etc

Just my $.02

Excellent post Sluggo. Much of what made the airlines as safe as they are today was brought about by the great men and innovators of the '30's right up to the present day; both pilots and enlightened management. That stuff wasn't free. The legacies bore the cost burden ($$ and lives) of crashed aircraft and ultimately the necessary improvements to make the air carrier environment what it is today.

AA's C.R. Smith can be credited with the DC-3's success as much as Douglas.

When you jump into an RJ or NG737 and fire up the TCAS, GPWS, radar, autopilot, etc, think a moment about where that stuff came from.
 
SWA/FO said:
Actually, I think we get a lot of stuff, info. from Fed Ex. It appears our management/training teams like eachother.


Yeah and we like you too..remember as harsh as it seems..its all in fun..so no more bashing the legacies and i won't make fun of MEMTRASH's short game!!!

p.s. thanks sluggo 63..you proved my point of this whole thread!! you da man...
 
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Your joking, right?

Sluggo_63 said:
1. First practical two-way radio
2. First reliable static-wick
3. Radio Altimeter
4. Gyro-stabilized auto-pilot
5. ILS
6. Weather radar
7. First airline to use electronic flight simulators
8. First to employ electronic computers to map out the safest and most fuel efficient route
9. First airline to install production-quality collision avoidance systems
10. It's DC-8's were the first to qualify under the FAA's all-weather landing program.
11. First female stewardesses
12. Elrey Jeppesen was a United Airlines pilot
...the list goes on and on...

Okay, maybe 7, 8, and 11 made them some money, but the rest were for the good of the industry.

I like SWA. I have lot's of friends there. UAL (and the other legacies) were around in a time when innovation meant safety and large technological leaps in the aviation industry, not just "we'll give them a cup of Coke instead of the whole can" or "I can get you from Houston to Harlingen for $39." They couldn't go to Boeing, Lockheed or Douglas and tell they wanted a DC-3 with dual ILS's a weather radar and GPWS. That stuff had to be invented. By the airlines. United for many years had a Boeing 247 that was converted to a flying laboratory to use developing and testing these new technologies. That's innovation.

Remember when you climb into your -700 that almost all the technology around you was pioneered by a legacy. One that sunk a LOT of money into developing that equipment so you and your passengers can get to point B safely. It's a shame hardly anyone remembers.

Just my $.02

Sluggo, you must have gotten this off the United website, heres the rest of the story.

1, Radio: Well on it's way by 1934, prefected by the amatuers and Navy for ship to ship. United did nothing more than ADAPT it, not inovate it. I would suggest they only did it to save a buck, like not loose an aircraft.

2, Static wick. Two words: Benjamin Franklin.

3. Radio Altimeter:Sorry again, B-17s had em during WWII.

4. Auto pilots: Again, WWII

5. ILS, your kidding me, didn't you see the movie???

6 Wx Radar, again WWII

7. Ill give you electronic sims, but at what cost and did they invent them? No lear Siegler (-sp).


9. Production quality TCASS, so there was a non production quality version around? hardly, made by Honeywell.

10. First to qualify, but somebody else proved it, maybe Douglas corp? Ill give you this one.

11. Now your talking, you win.

And with every shred of evidence you bring up, I point out it was done to make money. Not to better the world. Oh, and you can get a full can of coke on SWA, just ask.

I'm not slamming legacies, good for what they went through, thanks to our forefathers, etc. But they did it for money. Please keep it real.
 
scoreboard said:
Sluggo, you must have gotten this off the United website, heres the rest of the story.

1, Radio: Well on it's way by 1934, prefected by the amatuers and Navy for ship to ship. United did nothing more than ADAPT it, not inovate it. I would suggest they only did it to save a buck, like not loose an aircraft.

2, Static wick. Two words: Benjamin Franklin.

3. Radio Altimeter:Sorry again, B-17s had em during WWII.

4. Auto pilots: Again, WWII

5. ILS, your kidding me, didn't you see the movie???

6 Wx Radar, again WWII

7. Ill give you electronic sims, but at what cost and did they invent them? No lear Siegler (-sp).


9. Production quality TCASS, so there was a non production quality version around? hardly, made by Honeywell.

10. First to qualify, but somebody else proved it, maybe Douglas corp? Ill give you this one.

11. Now your talking, you win.

And with every shred of evidence you bring up, I point out it was done to make money. Not to better the world. Oh, and you can get a full can of coke on SWA, just ask.

I'm not slamming legacies, good for what they went through, thanks to our forefathers, etc. But they did it for money. Please keep it real.

I'm sorry if you can't remember back to the dark ages of aviation... the years before 1971. You do know that there were airlines way back then, don't you. Back in the 60's even the 50's... in fact there was an airline around in 1934 called United Airlines. Okay, I concede that the business plan wasn't drawn up on a cocktail napkin, and Pat Patterson didn't have to arm-wrestle for the right to use the United name, but despite those setbacks, it is still an airline. An innovative airline. And it predates WWII.

1, 3, 4, 6. UAL predates WWII (our involvement) by 7 years (more if you include Varney, NAT, and the others that formed United) They were instrumental in developing these technologies (the radio beacon, too... precursor to the VOR... google Thorp Hiscock [no joke])

2. Didn't know Franklin was flying around... I see your point, though

9. Ground collision avoidance

11. I hesitated to put this one on here seeing in what it resulted in these days. It used to be a good one though.

I still say that a lot is owed to these legacy airlines for their true innovations in the safety of today's airline industry.

Sluggo
 
Okay, I concede that the business plan wasn't drawn up on a cocktail napkin, and Pat Patterson didn't have to arm-wrestle for the right to use the United name

Boeing started UAL, right? Boeing makes airplanes, right? Boeing did their research through UAL thus making safer airplanes and to sell more airplanes.

I still say that a lot is owed to these legacy airlines for their true innovations in the safety of today's airline industry.

A lot of safety rules today are based on people getting hurt or dying. Trial and error, things never thought of until something happens... planes running into eachother, TCAS, TCA (class B) equipment requirements. Windshear before 1985? Now systems onboard to help with that. Controlled flight into terrain...etc... I think UPS has some good stuff going on with their moving map, that stuff was like in 3 D or something..

I've been told our new procedures at Southwest (checklist usage) maybe used at other carriers, we did most of that work with our SNORT team along with NASA.
 
What kind of international services will SWA provide in the future of this global economy?
 
Europe, Asia & the middle east.
 
No but our new airplane will. Everybody knows this - where you been?

Why did you ask the question in the first place? We were talking about "technology" achievements?
 
Sluggo_63 said:
12. Elrey Jeppesen was a United Airlines pilot

Elrey Jeppesen was a god.

<You may return to your regularly scheduled argument now.>
 
Hey swafo..are you guys enjoying your laptops...cool ..we are too...but i hear you guys have touch screen...what's up with that? we are going to an EFB this year with LIDO plates(yuck) don't like them so far...can we officially call THREAD OVER!!!
 
Don't stop now I have one more hour until my laxitive kicks in.
 
CaptainMark said:
What's funny about this thread it that the SWA guys are so defensive...SWA has increased their payscales and retirement package..GREAT!! i think the senior captains have to be the highest paid in the industry to fly the 73..but every swa pilot 10 years ago would have chosen UNITED or DELTA over swa..and don't lie...SWA was a distant second or 3rd choice..and if you say it wasn't you are lying...but whatever.....and SWAFO..abx has a 64 hr guarantee with that payrate we are on average 14 hrs more a month..and that is credit hr..not block..like last year i blocked 180hrs and got paid for 1000 or so...those are work rules..but you guys would not know about that..now go fly 10 legs!!!

oh yeah..met 3 swa dudes interviewing the other day...that says enough! off to the cargo board!

Actually at my commuter in the mid 90s SWA was a prime and only target of many guys. One in particular even cut the SWA logo into his farm field. The way I remember it then SWA was above the Legacies like UAL for quite alot of pilots. Yes, FedEx was also a prime target too.
 
CaptainMark said:
Hey swafo..are you guys enjoying your laptops...cool ..we are too...but i hear you guys have touch screen

He doesn't know that SWA got that from FedEx. The SW guys were around getting that all checked out when you were a new hire. They probably have better ones than us... they get a lot more use... 10,12 times a day.
 
?

Maybe this should be a new thread, I don't know. We touched on it here, so here goes:

Why continue to give people low fares? Are they not low enough? SWA's average fare last year was less than $100. $100 bucks! That is ridiculous. They could double that fare (or more) and it would still be more than fair! I know we can't do too much as pilots, and even less here on flightinfo, but we could discuss the pros and cons. I think it is woefully stupid to continue to pass on amazingly low fares to the flying public. They don't deserve it darnit! Everything is going up in all of our lives, why do we as air transportation workers have to be the chumps and give it up so cheap? There are other LCCs but I'll single out SWA: why are you worried about market share? I can't imagine why you even mention it. You have a great product, it has a value beyond price, you only go to 50 some places, but because you do it so uniquly, each time you launch a new place you (usually) create more traffic for every carrier in the neighborhood! You can grow indefinitly and have very little to worry about. Your only enemy (if you have one) is yourselves. Case in point: Your leadership is worried about costs and is out looking for savings (yes that is their job) and some have advanced the theory of pay cuts for you. I say no way, don't take pay cuts. I'm glad you make the big bucks and hope to see it emulated in CAL pilot contracts of the future. Although it stands in sharp contrast to the overall SWA pilot sentiment toward legacy pilots, I will not be invigorated in the least if SWA pilots end up taking a pay cut. Don't do it. Raise the fares and take the money. I promise, we will all go along with you, even NWA. Lets start charging people for this flying stuff like it matters to us.

And to that end: why do you think legacy contracts used to pay the amounts they once did? It is because you retired at 60 and you needed the extra dollars to bolster the somewhat early retirement age. Why does the SWA group so easily buy into the idea that we should work longer to make a good retirement? Heck with that. Lets get the dollars now and then decide if we want to work. Then it is an actual "choice" or alternative, when you don't have to do work longer.
 
Have you ever seen what a 60 year old fed ex pilot looks like after abusing his body with the funky schedules for so many years? And plz don't go to the fact that we now do the majority of our flying during the day...who is sleeping in boxes at Memphis and hauling the bread and butter of overnight delivery. $ is one thing...quality of life is quite another
 

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