JohnnyP said:
Just curious, what type of problems were the FO's having going into europe/asia? Also, how did you guys get YOUR first experience's down south? I wonder if those captains were talking to their buddies about you not being able to handle it.....everyones gotta be new at something some time or another.........
Yes, everybody's new at one time or another . . . . but not new to heavy jets (much less a 742F) AND the world's most demanding flying environment. Since I was an FO at the time, I didn't fly with the guys that were having trouble so whatever info I have is, like I said, second hand. However, I heard it from enough good Captains whose judgment I trusted to believe it 100%. I remember one Captain (whom I hadn't flown with before), after leveloff departing the UK, said "I really appreciate flying with you." I said "ah, ok, whatya mean by that? He said "You can run a checklist, you can talk on the radio, you anticipate what I want when I'm flying the airplane . . . believe me it's really refreshing compared to a lot of the FOs we've gotten recently." They were going after the individuals per se, the rather blaming the company for hiring inexperience, then winking them through training instead of washing-out those who just couldn't cut it. At that time the majors were sucking the good and experienced FOs out of the company at a rate of 25 per month. The company was back-filling seats with whatever they could find.
Company training in SA operations varys from outstanding (AA & Delta I believe have a ground school and an extensive check airman flight orientation), to a joke (many supplemental carriers with a "yea, read the Jepps airport pages" and "don't worry, your Captain will show you the ropes.")
The point is . . . one step at a time. Going from a prop or small jet to a 742F is too big a bite for all but a small minority of exceptionally skilled guys. Most need to grow their way into it. If this was the military where you had hard crews, and were groomed, cared for, and constantly trained & evaluated, it'd be different. The tramp freighter biz is completely different. Unsatisfactory guys get passed through the system with almost no supervision or quality control and the Captains, rightfully so, do not see it as their job to provide remedial training to weak FOs . . that's the company's job. And of course, we know what the companys do about it, even when the Captains complain to the Chief Pilot.
Yea, a few guys can come from small airplanes and do fine. But looking at it objectively with a wide-angle lens, from safety concerns alone, you can't justify it as a sound policy to hire inexperienced pilots in 747s, much less into highly demanding flying environments . . . and ESPECIALLY into supplemental carriers whose training programs are marginal anyway.