Whew, I know.
HarbourPilot said:
Don't you think you should use the sim ride for an initial evaluation, here your going to put pilots on the payroll, there going to take a seat in training, and all the copies and paperwork that need to be administered to him or her. And candidates dont even have to pay the $300 to start training. Oh and then provided they pass the ground training (Good Luck!) now give some free time in a 210. After all that is finished you realize the candidate needs more work before he can start flying single pilot IFR 135. Like someone said FLX is not a flight school. Sounds like a big waste of resources. The simulator evaluation is a useful tool, thats all im saying!
Point(s) well taken. The use of the SIM is the norm except if broken. However the industry's demand on us for pilots and additional runs compel use to modify and/or change the procedures.
I recall a day when you needed more than 600/100 (banner towing the main portion of that total) to fly right seat in a 1900. Now some of those fortunate individuals are being hired by the RJ boys. I have 210s and Barons and need 1100 for VFR and 1200 for IFR.
Not too long along the SIM was down. None of the 7 candidates took a SIM ride but all 7 made it through the training and are flying with us. Just like those candidates that are scheduled to come in this Monday, we are all taking our chances. Aviation is changing everyday and we are working to move along with it.
When you mention wasting resources, I can only say there are no guarantees. There is no guarantee that when we SIM someone and they pass, then flight train, and they pass, and send them to there domicile, and they arrive only to leave 24 hours later. Resources are something that the industry seems to be in short supply of.
I am the one that said we are not a flight school. We're not. I also said, you must pass the training to fly the line. By the way, we just got 3 more new runs. I need pilots who can fly 135. I hope everyone who comes in on the 18th does indeed pass.
Sad part is, when resources are plentiful that means the industry is in a slump (again)!
That's what I'm saying.