Dart
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2004
- Posts
- 310
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Join pprune for the good, bad, and ugly.
Mostly the last two.
You have to take pprune with a hefty helping of salt. It is by far the worst aviation bitch board out there. People on there find the silliest things to whine about. I remember one thread a few years back about how Emirates was the worst place on earth because crews were not allowed to drink the Evian water, they had to settle for the regular bottled water. Emirates may have issues, but crew members not being able to drink Evian water has to rank as one of the silliest complaints of all time. Yet this pprune thread make it sound like the worst injustice the piloting profession has ever seen.
I cannot speak to Hainan specifically, but I have heard they are one of the better Chinese outfits to work for. Having been in China for over a year now I can tell you that Chinese aviation is VERY different, and the culture can take some getting used to. Just to give you a small example - in the western world if your instructor tells you something that contradicts a manual, you always follow the manual. Hey, instructors do make mistakes, usually it is not a huge deal and you just move on. Good instructors will admit they made the mistake and take steps to correct it. However in China the instructor is God. You NEVER, EVER go against what your instructor has told you, even if the manual says differently. And you certainly never point out the error to the instructor or else he will lose face, a huge no-no in China. And causing someone to lose face is very disgraceful to yourself as well. Along those lines, as a student you never ask an instructor a difficult question because there is a risk he may not know the answer. You can only ask simple questions that will allow the instructor to show his knowledge, thus making him seem important. This seems silly, but that is how things work. We have several "procedures" at my airline that contradict the FCOM and FOM simply because some instructor made a mistake that nobody dared correct, and those mistakes have now become defacto procedure. Examples include always using flaps 2 for takeoff (we are an A320 operator), always using max reverse on landing, always turing the brake fans on and then riding the brakes while taxiing. None of these are recommend or required procedures in our manuals, and in fact they are all recommended against in most cases, yet they are treated as gospel here.
Anyway, I don't know if that helps at all with Hainan, it probably does not. But it may give you some insight about operating in China.
I thought the Asian carriers had learned from the accidents in the 80s and 90s (eg, Korean at Guam). Guess not.