Military vs. Civilian
Mark,
I thought your posts were great and they touch on a subject that seems to come up a lot on this website.
Your flying definitely sounds varsity to me, flying an air ambulance. I think a person could scarcely fly a more satisfying mission. Somebody's a$$ is on the line every time you crank the engines, your job is to help people and save lives. I’m sure things like weather mins and minimum equipment for flight have a whole new meaning with someone in desperate need of medical attention in the back.
The things that you discuss in your post are universals in aviation... dealing with emergencies, foul weather, decision making, and flying night after night on little or no sleep. These things also happen in military aviation to quite a great extent, and no matter what rules are published, what SOP's say, etc, we are put in situations where we must bend/break our rules- just as you are.
There was a really great article in IFR magazine some time around 94 to 98 about Carrier aviation. The guy did a great breakdown of the geometry of catching the three wire, and principles such as hook to eye and hook to ramp. There was an inset in the article by a former Tomcat guy turned airline bubba named Jay Bliss. He gave the (high) numbers of aircraft and aircrew lost in his airwing's time at sea. He said that ALL were lost at night or in IMC. So, no matter what us military guys say about our flying, oftentimes the things that kill us are the exact same things that kill our civilian counterparts. This lends credit to your post, and we have a great deal in common.
But I will respectfully submit the following for your consideration. I'm a young, relatively inexperienced guy just reaching my first thousand hours. A basic outline of my flying experiences are as follows- these milestones are typical for my buddies from flight school... and in most respects their experiences are much more demanding and dangerous than mine have been.
My first aerobatic solo was at about 25 hours of experience after countless spins in the old T-34, first formation flights after about 60 hours. Solo in a multiengine jet in less than 100 (less than that for our Air Force buds). Air to air gunnery at 200, dropping bombs at 220 and dogfights/seeing the back of an aircraft carrier for the first time at 250 hours. Wings at around 280, Night CQ at 350 and my first combat / getting shot at- at well below 400. That was as a 25 year old aircraft commander (single pilot) in a multi crew platform. A typical flight would be a 50 minute trip across Saudi at night to find the tanker in the clouds, about an hour and a half in country, tank, another 1.5 in country, backside tank, then back home for a night ILS to a gucci 10k air force runway. (Immeasurably easier than the boat at night).
Weather?... been there. EP's… in an old Grumman the list gets long quick. Engines, Hydraulics, electrical, hung gear, split flaps, explosive d, ruptured fuel cells pumping fuel into the cockpit. Night after night flying- we've all been there. I guarantee JimNTexas could post many more harrowing stories than I have. 400agl at night is the ULTIMATE in CRM/ACT- things I imagine the airlines value.
You said you had nobody helping you to make the right decisions. We'll often have people "helping," pressuring us to make the wrong ones, just as I'm sure you've had bosses do. It takes the same type of leadership for a young LT to stand up to pressure to do unsafe things that it does for a 10,000 hour captain to stand up to dispatch, etc. Military guys learn decision making young.
What does night tanking, or flying through the mountains at 400a have to do with airline flying? How about muliti-tasking skills? (The comms over a foreign country with jets coordinating a strike are far more busy than LA’s class B. I’ve been in both situations many times. Do you know how many different freqs your average tacair guy is on simultaneously? In my jet it’s three and they are all busy as heck. What does fighting another jet have to do with airline flying? How about comfort in a dynamic environment, an appropriate fear threshold, the experience of recovering an aircraft that has departed controlled flight. If I’m in the back of a 737 that has a rudder PCU fail, I'd like a fighter guy at the controls… even if he did scare off all the chicks at the bar.
And at only 1000 hours, 60 or 70 combat missions, with nearly half of my time in type being combat time, I've had it easier than so many other guys in other more demanding platforms, flying off the ship at night, etc.
As for the guys senior to me that are at the 1500-2000 hour mark that get the "easier" treatment from the airlines... They are in charge of 4 jets in a flight, the tactical mission planning (in addition to all standard flight planning), all on top of a ground job that is more than enough to employ a non-flyer full time. And yes, these guys do this in bad weather and at night as well.
I'm not an expert on civilian flying but I do have many civilian friends in the commuters and a couple that have made it big- and most of them got their first 500-1000 teaching stalls in a 152, then another 1500 as a FO.
Sir, with respect, how many of your 4500 hours are turbine PIC? About 700 of my first 1000 are.
Many CFIs and MEI’s wash out of Navy flight school. I’m sure icing up in a Cessna is scary as heck- but many guys with all the civvy experience in the world just can’t think at jet speeds.
Add up the number of cycles a military jet guy flies. Flight time builds slow flying 1.1's teaching in Kingsville or meridian. It would be interesting to compare the number of cycles in a military jet guy's logbook to a high time civilian's. (Hence conversion factors).
One last thing- go to the majors portion of this website and see what all the old military guys have to say about getting on with the airlines- how the stress level and nature of the flying compares to their military experience, and how happy they are to be where they are now. I guess that is something we could all learn something from.
I have not intended to boast on my own experiences, like I said the guys out there right now flying off the boat night at night really earn their money, as do our Air Force, Marine, and Army brothers. Everything I listed is standard for a military guy my age. I certainly have not meant to disrespect or belittle the experiences of civilian aviators. Some of your stories of flying air ambulance don’t sound fun at all, and were certainly challenging.
However, I believe military pilots deal with all the challenges dangers present in civilian aviation and much more- at an earlier age, lower flight time, and with superior training. That being said, I respectfully maintain that military experience warrants a significant hours bias in airline hiring over civilian candidates.