Flyingdog1
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2005
- Posts
- 95
It was a joint decision between the company and the union training folks to make those separate fleets. Having flown the Ultra, the Encore and the EP at NJA, I'm quite surprised that the FAA allows a common type rating between those three models: different avionics and FMS's, limitations, systems, memory items, etc.
But I think NJA took the right approach separating the fleets. I was dual-qualified on the Ultra and the Encore at one point and there were a lot of differences between those two planes to keep straight.
604/605 have the same memory items, systems and limitations. the difference between the 5000 and 6000 FMS is that 4 buttons are different places. The only thing you have to learn in differences training is how to work the auto throttles and get used to looking at system info in a different format. No sense in splitting the fleet for that.