Fsi
Guys,
Two things come to mind here ...
1) FSI FAR135 check airmen and instructors are required to get some operational experience in the airplane type they teach. The trick is, they don't have to be in a pilot seat. It is a Line Operations Observation only. If anyone tells you they have to fly in your FAR 135 line operations, they are pulling your leg. They don't, and unless they meet all your company's requirements, i.e. Basic Indoc, drug testing, TSA background, etc., they can't act as a crewmember and be in compliance.
2) FSI instructors are very good at what they do. That is teach a specific course in a specific airplane simulator, made up of specific lessons. They do that over and over and over again. Yes, they get very good at that. They are very good at the specific airplane's systems, limitations, normal, abnormal and emergency procedures. But just how often do you make a simulator go from one place to another? As a previous poster stated, take them out in the real world where you are going to and from airports they have never been to and do stuff that they haven't thought of, they are quite out of their element.
I have several good friends that teach at FSI and Simuflite and I'm not meaning to slam them, but I'll bet they would agree with me.
TransMach