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Grant Aviation in AK

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Iflyamouse

Is it time for lunch yet?
Joined
Jul 24, 2002
Posts
129
Wondering if anybody has some info on Grant Aviation in Anchorage, AK. http://www.flygrant.com
Specifically, I hear they have a 15 on 15 off schedule that "may be available." Does anybody have details on that schedule?

Also ... what can I expect pay wise for the 207's or the Navajo?

What about working conditions? I think I remember hearing Grant had the feds on their backs a couple of years ago.

Flying around Alaska ... what a way to spend a five years on furlough!
 
I don't work for Grant, but I did research them a little. It looks like they pay a daily rate with an hourly if you exceed a certain number of flight hours in that day.

If you are going to fly a sled(207) in Alaska learn this phrase

"Request Special VFR"
 
Capstone Scores First Save
Equipment Plays Crucial Role in Alaskan Search and Rescue Mission
ADS-B is being credited for saving an Alaskan pilot. The pilot is recuperating from injuries suffered in a Grant Aviation C-207 crash earlier this week and thanking the Capstone equipment aboard his aircraft for his rescue.
Capstone is a real-world implementation of multiple technologies in Alaska that can benefit general aviation. Capstone uses ADS-B - automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast - to augment air traffic control (ATC) radar coverage. Using the global positioning satellite system (GPS) and a datalink, Capstone-equipped aircraft broadcast their GPS-derived location to other aircraft and to air traffic control. ADS-B can work in areas where radar is unavailable or impractical.
On Monday, pilot Erick Gutierrez flew from Bethel 75 miles north to the village of Marshall, Alaska. He didn't return, and his employer notified authorities the aircraft was overdue. In this case, the downed aircraft's emergency locator transmitter failed to trigger. As a National Guard helicopter crew prepared to launch, rescue organizers turned to air traffic controllers, who called up the aircraft's ADS-B track and were able to vector a rescue helicopter directly to the aircraft's last known position. Barely two and a half hours after he was reported missing,
the pilot had been picked up.
"The more we see of Capstone's capabilities, the more we support the technology's widespread deployment," said AOPA's Director of Advanced Technology Randy Kenagy. "Improved search and rescue capabilities are just some of the advantages
this datalink offers to general aviation pilots. Traffic information and near-real-time weather graphics will also help improve safety."
Air traffic controllers in Alaska are using Project Capstone's ADS-B
capabilities to vector equipped aircraft to an ILS approach at an airport without radar service. In addition, pilots can receive weather and traffic data in the cockpit via the datalink. Using the multifunction display that is an integral part of the Capstone avionics, pilots receive near-real-time NEXRAD weather radar displays along with textual weather.
Other ADS-B-equipped aircraft broadcasting their locations are displayed on the MFD as well, aiding in collision avoidance. The datalink is also capable of receiving information from ground-based radar on non-ADS-B aircraft. An on-board terrain database displayed on the MFD (seen below) with the GPS-derived position
gives pilots increased positional awareness and helps prevent controlled flight into terrain.
AOPA has backed Project Capstone from the outset. The association has taken part in the demonstration by setting up a test transmitter at AOPA's Frederick, Maryland, headquarters and equipping two AOPA-owned aircraft with Capstone avionics to
be able to evaluate and demonstrate the technology.
FMI: http://www.alaska.faa.gov/capstone
 
I almost went to work there a few years ago, and a half year after I would have started, a guy got killed in one of their 207's. If you've never flown in Alaska, it is quite something, beautiful and wonderous but also kind of dangerous, especially come winter. There are a lot of wrecks and a fair number of pilots die up there. I think the pay for 207 pilot was something like $35,000, and they have "housing", but remember the cost of living is quite high up there. I may be quite wrong on that pay figure. Good luck.
 

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