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HAZARDOUS attitudes at REGIONALS

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hahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!! :laugh:

Keep it up, you'll see.

Back to the issue at hand, JDR: Perhaps, with the stress of the job and the state of the industry, these regional pilots are unaware of their hazardous attitudes. How would you solve the problem with a flight student? Education and awareness! Regional pilots and flight attendants are no different. Measures to teach these pilots the errors of their ways need to be explored and implemented. The greatest journey begins with just one step, so my challenge to you is this: Next time you fly on a regional airline and witness a hazardous attitude, pull the crewmember in question aside and make them aware of what hazardous attitude(s) they are displaying. Maybe they are just having a bad day, and respectfully educating them could solve the problem and potentially save lives in the process.
 
Keep it up, you'll see.

Back to the issue at hand, JDR: Perhaps, with the stress of the job and the state of the industry, these regional pilots are unaware of their hazardous attitudes. How would you solve the problem with a flight student? Education and awareness! Regional pilots and flight attendants are no different. Measures to teach these pilots the errors of their ways need to be explored and implemented. The greatest journey begins with just one step, so my challenge to you is this: Next time you fly on a regional airline and witness a hazardous attitude, pull the crewmember in question aside and make them aware of what hazardous attitude(s) they are displaying. Maybe they are just having a bad day, and respectfully educating them could solve the problem and potentially save lives in the process.


hahahahahahahahahaha!!!! :laugh: I don't know who is funnier- you or the thread starter. Maybe you to can get together and write a book together on the hazards of being a regional pilot.
 
Keep it up, you'll see.

Back to the issue at hand, JDR: Perhaps, with the stress of the job and the state of the industry, these regional pilots are unaware of their hazardous attitudes. How would you solve the problem with a flight student? Education and awareness! Regional pilots and flight attendants are no different. Measures to teach these pilots the errors of their ways need to be explored and implemented. The greatest journey begins with just one step, so my challenge to you is this: Next time you fly on a regional airline and witness a hazardous attitude, pull the crewmember in question aside and make them aware of what hazardous attitude(s) they are displaying. Maybe they are just having a bad day, and respectfully educating them could solve the problem and potentially save lives in the process.

Are you related to instructordude? Seriously, thanks and keep the laughs coming.
 
Guys, recently there's been a lot of arguments on the board about different things, but I want to make you aware of probably the newest threat to the regional industry. The FAA is currently focusing on traffic collisions on taxiways, but my friend and I are conducting some studies and making a presentation to the FSDO soon about the 5 hazardous attitudes and how they play a bad role, most frequently at the regionals.

One of the most common things I've heard about when I talk to some FO's at the local FBO is that captain's always show the tendency of "get-home-itis". This is not a joke. Some captains even go as far as telling FO's to "fly it like you stole it." In that case, would you really fly an airplane cross country with passengers at 300 ft. with the transponder on standby? The answer is no. But captains will make FO's believe they can "fly it like they stole it" just in order to get home sooner. This is a threat.

Another one is being too macho. I was flying in the cabin last summer to go back home and take this chick from high school on a night flight, and here's what happened: The captain got on the mic at about Fl160 and announced to everyone that they should stay seated because we were going through some "turb." Well, let me tell you. This captain probably flew through red plots on the radar. It was continuously bumpy and the flight attend didn't even get up. I even told the lady sitting next to me about the threat of microbursts and what could happen to us. She started to get worried but I was too concerned with other things to worry. I got off the plane and look at the sky and saw gray everywhere.

An other time I was talking to a FO this career fair and I asked how many CAP's display anti-authority. He said not many, but one time he said there was a captain that wouldn't board because they were in E-Dick, or something like that.

Anyways, I want to know some other hazardous attitudes that are displayed in the regionals. I know there are a lot. But I think I can help because my friend and I are halfway through this powerpoint for a ground school class and I think the FAA would be VERY interested in what we have to say.
Having only read the original post in this thread I can safely assume that you, JDREsquire1224, are an f...in' idiot. No need to read any further to see who bit on your flame bait.
 
We call it "get home power." It's practically SOP. And I'm pretty sure that the CA plans it out well in advance that he always gets the last leg of the trip. At least that's what I would do if I were CA.

-Goose
 
Lot of good response material on this thread and I will definitely include it in my powerpoint presentation. It's a shame so many find humor in my plight. How are you going to feel next time you fly home and the captain of your regional is being impulsive? Maybe he decides to land in the wrong direction of forgets to put full flaps down, I don't know, but these are threats and I will help admonish them. Well, not just me, but everyone helping, especially my friend. Here are some other things I was thinking about too. About the attitude of resignation. I don't know what to say about this one. Maybe flying with a bad FO and you just resign that the landings are going to be bad? It'd kind of be like marrying Rhea Pearlman, in that you accept your partner for who they are knowing that the landing or lay is going to be terrible. Maybe in my presentation I'll even have a little picture of her and photoshop a pilot hat on her LOL I don't know, I'm just kidding guys. But back on point, I was talking to a friend at a big regional and he was telling me how a lot of the time a captain might not even call for a checklist and just assumes you'll do stuff. I don't know but that deifinitely is an attitude of invincibility, kind of like saying, "I don't know if it's done but I'll still be able to land the plane." My friend said sometimes the cargo fan isn't put on. Come on guys, you don't want that to cause damage or crash a plane. I'm reaching out to you because this is where careers start and I want to nip probs before they grow. I'll be back on later to collect info.
 

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