Paradoxus
Sith Sorcerer
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2004
- Posts
- 5,376
I forgot paradox-
did you get your degree in pelican bay or Folsom?
;-)
Riker's actually. Better overall extra-curricular program.
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I forgot paradox-
did you get your degree in pelican bay or Folsom?
;-)
not true, it is still a basic level of skill and desire that allows you to get an ATP. Pilots with ACT scores of 19 are getting ATP's, that is a pretty basic skill level. The part is you want to do it and put up with this fickle career.Anybody with a "basic level of skill" and desire can probably solo or obtain a private license. Takes a little bit more than "basic level of skill" to go beyond that. And I guess that I'm restating what many have already stated then about the college degree thing. Thanks.
not true, it is still a basic level of skill and desire that allows you to get an ATP. Pilots with ACT scores of 19 are getting ATP's, that is a pretty basic skill level.
yea but these guys still get ATP's, do they get hired by DAL, maybe not now. We give a mini ASVAP type test during our interviews, graded on a standard 9 dev. Pilots who score 6 or better are pretty good employees, pilots who score 4 or below have problems. This test looks for higher levels of basic skills. However many of the lower scores come 121 APT's, so I guess with lower scores they still have that certain level of skill.What the hell does ACT scores have to do with anything? I was agreeing with you about college. You don't need a degree to fly an airplane. It's just a way for interviewers to thin out the stack of applicants.
I do disagree with the basic level of skill thing though. I've seen pilots that were excellent stick and rudder guys that couldn't find there way out of a cloud. I've also seen guys that could shoot an approach nuts on every time that can't land in a crosswind. You put just those two things together and I believe that it takes more than just a "basic level of skill" to be a professional pilot. It does the whole profession a dis-service to oversimplify what it takes to become a professional especially in today's cockpit.
Bingo give that man a cigar.Trouble is that the self-important people who sift through apps have that piece of paper - though clearly one is not required to do their job either. Since THEY have one though, anyone who doesn't is somehow less qualified.
Bingo another cigarA college degree is about becoming educated...not skilled. Flying an airplane is a skill.
The best stick and rudder pilot I have ever flown with was a non-college educated gentleman from Alabama who flew everything under the sun from before he was legal to do it. I watched him do the "Bob Hoover engine out from altitude into the tie-downs" at least a dozen times in several different airplanes without fail. I would tell him he was living on the edge and he would say..."only if you don't know what you're doing."
Since then I have done IOE with 500hr UND "wonders" who flew the EMB145 with ease and then done IOE with a 3500hr BE99 captain who couldn't land an EMB145 to save his life.
I now fly with some excellent pilots who can land on short runways without it seeming like an emergency procedure and yet I fly with guys that wouldn't pass a private pilot check-ride because they don't know how to land in a cross-wind.
The "nuts and bolts" of flying an airliner has nothing to do with a college education. I have one but you wouldn't know it by my grammar or the way I spell...of course you wouldn't know it by most journalists either.
If I had to choose I would take a great stick and rudder pilot over a college education any day of the week and twice on Sunday.
When I talk to kids about this career I tell them to get a degree in something that they enjoy and maybe something they can fall back on.
My 2 cents.
Hah!!! Just like my dad told me. I was too smart to listen though. If I would've been just a little bit smarter I would've majored in anything else.When I talk to kids about this career I tell them to get a degree in something that they enjoy and maybe something they can fall back on.
http://www.taphilo.com/history/WWII/Loss-Figures. after finding it again, I find out I was wrong, I understated the true losses. It turns out it was between 1941 and 1945, and it was over 15,500 fatalities and 6,351 fatal crashes during training.Cite your source.