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Sounds great. I am impressed with their latest designation. Did someone say something about the average monthly schedule - days off? I am a big fan of the Lear 60 and I would think the variety inherent in this type of position would be very interesting.wings421 said:I don't work for JetRide but I've talked to a few of the pilots. Some indicate that their schedule isn't that good. As far as the trips, I think that they cover a lot of Flexjet stuff. I don't know what the ratio is that Heavy Set was looking for but I'd bet its 50/50 or better (again, no solid info to prove it though). The JetRide guys get to use AirNet's jumpseat agreements - if thats a factor at all. Something to think about, lots of Lear captains and some co-pilots have left the cargo side and gone to NetJets and Citation Shares instead of going to JetRide. Thats not to say that some haven't gone to JetRide though. Call Craig Washka up and he'll shoot straight with you and answer your questions.
Great post. You answered a lot of questions. Did you have previous Lear 60 experience? I have heard a lot of great things about the Lear 60 and that it is a blast to fly.payton said:From the inside:
Schedule, 3 pilots per airplane, You make the schedule up between the 3 of you and submit it to Matt (C.P.). He doesnt care when you work as long as the plane is covered. Most crews do 2 weeks on 1 week off. If you need a day off then you work it out between the 3 of you. Two weeks vacation per yr.
Pay, good luck with that one. It makes no rime or reason what everyone is making. Everyone knows what each other is making because - as it was put to me - "thats how we know who is getting screwed and who isnt."
Bennies, We are switching to Atena, Cant complain about this area at all. 401k included.
Airplane, Maint is great, you write it up, it gets fixed. the 3 pilots take care of it like its their own. You clean it, you stock it. Hanger depends on the base. In Dallas and Lancaster we have our own hangers and you stack and pull your airplane. The other bases we are at FBOs.
Trips, the majority of our trips are backing up Flexjet. Most of them will be 1 day trips in my experience. They will normally have you sit at an fbo until about 10-12 duty hours and then send you home if they cant find anything else for you to do. The dallas base does a lot of island trips. scottsdale does some mexico. stl does a lot of misc. lancaster goes up and down the east coast a lot. not sure what mdw trips are like. Crew meals usually only when you do a flex trip. Otherwise your on your own. $30 a day per diem.
You are home a lot.
Upgrade, depends on your experience and if your willing to move or can commute to the new base. Most folks can upgrade from 6 months to 1 year.
Growth, who knows. They say we are approved for another 5 Lear 60s next year. Im not sure where else they would put them. The northwest is the only area we dont have covered. Believe it when the airplane shows up on the ramp and your taking off on a trip.
training contract. I hear they are starting to have a 1 yr training contract. Not sure what it costs.
Open bases, it usually changes from the time you interveiw to the time you start work. sdl is no longer open.
did i get everything.
Great point. Lear 70 - heed his words - don't leave Pinnacle until you have at least 1,000 hours PIC on the CRJ. That will give you more options later. That being said, if you can get PIC time on the 601, that wouldn't be such a bad deal.psysicx said:I would wait at least untill you 1000 hours turbine pic.Also don't forget to apply to UPS and Fedex.