Nice thread gentlemen. I've read it all with great interest and lots of nostalgia. Some of the phraseology has changed but the rest of it brings back lots of memories, good, bad and I suppose indifferent. It's just amazing how much has changed and yet, how much is the same old story.
I'm not looking for a flying job now and I never will be again, but as I read of your experiences and ideas it's fun to compare them with those of days now gone. One thing is certain, the "careers" of those who choose to fly for a living can be simple or highly complex. One thing is certain, they won't all be the same no matter which segment you're in. It all seems to depend on where and when you entered the game and a great many events over which you really have little or no control. The "best" choices of today can turn out to be the "worst" in a different time or you can be just plain lucky and have smooth sailing all the way. I guess in the final analysis it all boils down, at least for me, into how much satisfaction you get out of riding around in aluminium tubes with appendages.
I've done the military bit. The flying was the greatest, but the way of life wasn't my cup of tea. I did no more than what I had to and never looked back for a day. Yet, when it started it was all I wanted to do. I just didn't know what it really was like. The only thing I could see was the airplanes. What a rude awakening that turned out to be.
And then the instructing. Hated it when I started. Only did it because there were no jobs. If you think the hiring market is bad now, that's just because you haven't been around long enough. It kind of grew on me though and today I still like the training department. Glad I had to do it. I admit to zero interest in the initial stuff, but I enjoy training in transports.
The Supplementals (non-skeds). There are still a bunch of them around although I don't hear much about them and the pilots don't seem to write on any board I've found. Talk about scum bag outfits. You haven't lived until you've done some of that and believe me I've done a lot. There's nothing quite like being stuck in Buenos Aires with 70 ton's of airplane and a company that can't pay it's gas bill. It's also great for your credit rating when your airline bounces your pay check and then goes bankrupt.
Corporate? Well to each his own. I know this is your part of the forum and I probably shouldn't be saying this here, but it wasn't for me. I've done it and all 3 of the Companies were 500 companies. Some how I always fellt more like a chauffeur (sp) than a pilot. I know I work in a service industry but I've never enjoyed feeling like a servant. Oh I was paid well, stayed in all those top dog hotels and enjoyed the full expense account, etc. But I still felt like the driver of my boss's company car. I didn't like the CEO's trashy wife, who could swill a bottle of Vodka between PIT and BOS and cuss like a dockside harlot. Or the VP in the other Company whose big thrill in life was goosing my FO, or the roudy Engineers who truned the interior of my beautiful aircraft into a pig sty, that I had to clean. Or the ignorant COO (different Co.) who **CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED**ed near got our airplane confiscated by a European Govt. or the one that thought we could ignore some "Camel Drivers" Mig. And I wasn't thrilled by flying a Poodle to LGA and waiting all day because some pampered executive's wife just couldn't have its hair clipped anywhere else.
Job security? Not really, I've seen corporate departments sold out from under the noses of the crews, with no warning whatever or disappear overnight as the result of a merger. And yes, I'm talking about the "big boys". These were not come lately or fly-by night corporations. I remember Westinghouse, whose CP got his kicks by making his new hires wash his car. And I remember the snobs at PPG who discovered (once they got bought out) that the way they treated others now applied to them. Some guys had it made or so they said, but if you were on the inside (not reading this board) the stories were quite similar to my own. I've only scratched the surface. We had the best equipment money could buy (in all 3 places), but I didn't miss it for a day. Maybe it's all different now. You would know the answer.
Then one day you land the dream job and your whole world changes. Paradise, right up until the first furlough notice and its back to hauling car parts out of YIP or running Muslims to Mecca for Haaj. You do get recalled though, sometimes sooner than others. And you get senior and life gets very good. Then one day they pull the plug and you start all over again.
Now we have the pesky regional. They come in all sizes and shapes and no, just like corporations, they aren't all alike. Yet even in the best, you struggle with managerial despots, fight with your own union that will sell you out in a heartbeat, and just hope you can hang on long enough to retire and find something else (flying related of course) that you can still do for fun.
Was it worth it? Yep, you bet it was. Would I do it again? Without question, yes. Why? I like airplanes and the people that fly them.
It's quite a rush to be sliding down the runway at 90 deg to the landing direction while you pray that the ice won't stop before the airplane does. When you're so heavy out of MIA in a lumbering recip that you can't make any turns until you cross the coast or when the cockpit is glowing red from the raging fire on #3 and you've already fired the #1 bottle on a dark Kingston night. There's nothing quite so beautiful on a clear day when you can see the ice cap on Greenland from 200 miles away or the snows of Kilamanjaro from nearly as far. Or you don't know how you're going to deal with the wind at Keflavick, but there's no where else to go and somehow you get it done. Or that kid you just told he could make his "first three" solo, but you're really worried and then ... he greases all 3. Or the veteran you just transitioned and you can proudly watch as he finesses two out on the same side on takeoff with a fuel dump and a flawless ILS with 1200 rvr and no glass, just hands. Or the time you show off (in the sim) because you know you're a great stick, only to land with the gear in the wells and put your "pride" back where it belongs.
It's a great life people. Cherish every moment you have 'cause only a few are really called to doing this. All of you folks that worry about the pay checks and the perks and the days off and your upgrade and all that other stuff that has nothing to do with flying, well maybe your degree would do you better in another field and you should try something else. To my fellow aviators.............. God bless you all. Enjoy it while you can.
PS. Sorry, I got carried away. Airlines are the way to go and yes, they'll take you from corporate if you have enough time, but generally they prefer you from the military or the 121 operation.