AlbieF15
F15 Ret/FDX/InterviewPrep
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2001
- Posts
- 1,764
I'm with General Lee.
I cannot possibly fathom why some guys relish the FE job. I have done CFI work, flipped burgers, growth burley tobacco, raised cattle, done photography, and worked as a retail clerk...all prior to flying for the AF. Some of the work was gritty hard work, but some of it was a lot of fun. Being an FE reminds me a lot more of some of the "drudge" work I did before and during college...not the flying I have gotten to do since. I do not relish the "brain dead" time, as boredom is the one thing I hate most about this job. I think competition with the captain on landings looks like a blast...and maybe if I ever FLY this old jet I'll develop some affection for it...but until then its just a job.
Plumbing this piece of FOD isn't the only bad part--its jumping through your @ss at every preflight then having an FO slide his seat so far aft you cannot open the non-pilot desk of shame and ask you for a sani-wipe, a bottle of water, or some other nonsense just as your world is exploding in paperwork queep. (This usually immediately follows his dumping the weather and other paperwork on top of a weight and balance sheet you were just working up...) For you FOs out there...if an FE hasn't ALREADY gotten you a bottle of water and given you a sani-wipe so you can disinfect the seat from the last lazy piece of crap FO, its only because there must have been some mitagating factor that has gotten him behind. Usually, its a mx issue that you have to troubleshoot, but it can also be some other issue with the ramp, etc. And no...I really don't need your ideas or techniques that you picked up during your 7 month tenure on the panel prior to your upgrade.
The only thing that keeps a smile on my face during the job is the fact better things await once enough guys move on. Good or bad, seniority is how things work in the airlines, and we all know lots of guys who've had it much worse than any of us. All of us in the back 5% at FedEx are greatful to have jobs with a great company, so we keep smiling and charging on, especially when our friends who 2 years ago were flying the 757 are now furloughed. However, when I see a row of 727s in the desert parked, I don't feel sad...I see a guy who now doesn't twist his back sitting sideways in an ergonomic nightmare who is hopefully off learning an FMS somewhere.
Rock on General Lee. Here's hoping maybe ONE day I can fly too, even if it is after I've done the walk around.
I cannot possibly fathom why some guys relish the FE job. I have done CFI work, flipped burgers, growth burley tobacco, raised cattle, done photography, and worked as a retail clerk...all prior to flying for the AF. Some of the work was gritty hard work, but some of it was a lot of fun. Being an FE reminds me a lot more of some of the "drudge" work I did before and during college...not the flying I have gotten to do since. I do not relish the "brain dead" time, as boredom is the one thing I hate most about this job. I think competition with the captain on landings looks like a blast...and maybe if I ever FLY this old jet I'll develop some affection for it...but until then its just a job.
Plumbing this piece of FOD isn't the only bad part--its jumping through your @ss at every preflight then having an FO slide his seat so far aft you cannot open the non-pilot desk of shame and ask you for a sani-wipe, a bottle of water, or some other nonsense just as your world is exploding in paperwork queep. (This usually immediately follows his dumping the weather and other paperwork on top of a weight and balance sheet you were just working up...) For you FOs out there...if an FE hasn't ALREADY gotten you a bottle of water and given you a sani-wipe so you can disinfect the seat from the last lazy piece of crap FO, its only because there must have been some mitagating factor that has gotten him behind. Usually, its a mx issue that you have to troubleshoot, but it can also be some other issue with the ramp, etc. And no...I really don't need your ideas or techniques that you picked up during your 7 month tenure on the panel prior to your upgrade.
The only thing that keeps a smile on my face during the job is the fact better things await once enough guys move on. Good or bad, seniority is how things work in the airlines, and we all know lots of guys who've had it much worse than any of us. All of us in the back 5% at FedEx are greatful to have jobs with a great company, so we keep smiling and charging on, especially when our friends who 2 years ago were flying the 757 are now furloughed. However, when I see a row of 727s in the desert parked, I don't feel sad...I see a guy who now doesn't twist his back sitting sideways in an ergonomic nightmare who is hopefully off learning an FMS somewhere.
Rock on General Lee. Here's hoping maybe ONE day I can fly too, even if it is after I've done the walk around.