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Los1 said:OK Gents!!
I feel like I ahve to refocus the thread!!
Tony!! How's it going? The Boeing Left seat worth it?
You know, I couldve held it this last big bid...
Any rumors on a replacement
your ever humble student
Los1
PseudoName said:Holy Cow!!! I thought FedEx was hiring experienced pilots. By looking at Wojo's profile, his ATP is still wet. (Sorry Wojo...no offense, but congrats on the job.)
Is FedEx aware that there are thousands of pilots on the street, with tons of time, numerous type ratings and operational experience who NEED a job?
pilot141 said:The interview process can handle 6 people/day and it's a 2-day process.
pilot141 said:A380 training should start in Sep 07.
\profile said:Tony
Having done the same thing (the 727 Capt) I agree completely. Those that never flew a window seat in the Boeing have missed some great training and great experience. Also, that left seat was a blast!
profile said:there is more to gain by taking the Boeing route than you might think.
.VaB said:What is it? I'm with Echopapa on this one, I'm waiting for the left seat of the 11 or a new narrow body with glass.
I've heard this same thing several times that you, Profile, and TonyC have said. It's just that noone ever elaborates. Is it a secret or something intangible that can't be described or what?
psysicx said:Do people ever go from the right seat of the MD to the left seat of the bus?
I have never flown the A300 in any seat. I have jumpseated it only once, and that was enough to convince me... no, actually it doesn't qualify me to say anything about the A300.Echopapa said:I have never flown the 727 in any seat. I have jumpseated it only once, and that was enough to convince me to stay well clear. I plan to move from wide body right seat to wide body left seat. I have already passed up Captain on the Boeing and the only thing I miss is the extra pay.
You certainly didn't hear the word "forced" come out of my mouth, I would never advocate the concept. You also did not hear me advocate one window seat over the other in the Boeing. The program is essentially the same. The 2-hour Composite Oral prior to the Type-Rating ride is a team effort - - the Captain and First Officer share the same experience, the same event. I mentioned to Los1 that the right seat of the Boeing would provide the same advantage, but I don't really see wide-body FOs downbidding to the Boeing right seat to get that experience. The logical place for them to go is the left seat of the Boeing.Echopapa said:I hear this a lot for Boeing guys......"Everyone should be forced to fly the Boeing as a Captain before upgrading to the wide bodies". I couldn't disagree more.
Agreed. Again, it's not the "Captain-ness" of the program at issue, at least in my mind. Having the potential to be a Captain is not at issue, either.Echopapa said:1. Everyone hired at FedEx has already been a Captain.
Did I say anything about steam guages versus glass? No. Again, that has nothing to do with it. I had flown steam guages before - - big deal. I disagree that it's counterproductive, but that's a topic for another day. The 727 program did not teach me to fly steam guages.Echopapa said:2. I don't think flying steam gauges helps prepare someone to fly a glass aircraft. If anything its counter productive.
I'm not sure I agree with you on the difficulty level. The jobs are different, true, but the differences are not so much particular to being a Captain. Granted, I don't have a lot of experience under my belt as a Boeing Captain, but I'm not even talking about that either. I'm talking about the experience of the training program. I found it to be very educational and beneficial.Echopapa said:3. I think that the 727 is a more difficult Captains job...so why start off that way? You don't have an FMS that tells you things like divert fuel, ACARS, or a moving map with weather overlay. The 727 also has the worst schedules, into the smallest fields, flying full proceedure approaches, and with no control tower.
I didn't say it was easy. I said it was a worthwhile experience, one that merits consideration by a professional aviator. I've known Los1 for quite some time now, and consider him to be one. Consequently, I recommend he consider it.Echopapa said:Wide body flying is CAKE. Big cities, with approach controls that have already established a routing around weather. I have yet to do anything in the 4 years I've been here but a straight in visual or ILS into a field with an operational control tower. A T-37 student could handle that.
Hey, I thought we already had a number 3! Do we need to go back to kindergarten?Echopapa said:3. The FOM is not that complicated, and being a Captain here is not a big deal. Compared to the USAF this job is cake. You don't have to run your own flight plan. You don't do you own dip clearances. You show up an hour prior to block and go fly...cake. If you have a problem (WX, re-route, divert) you have GOC to help. I was in my mid 20's flying the left seat of a DC-10 internationally doing EVERYTHING.
I was one of them, I empathize completely. IF the narrowbody replacement program contains the same "entry level" emphasis as the 727 program, I'd whole-heartedly endorse that plan. If it's designed, however, based on the assumption, as the wide-body programs assume today, that you've already been through the "727 program," then I'd find the same fault in it as the pure wide-body approach today.Echopapa said:There are many many wide body F/O's that never plan to fly the Boeing. I would of course consider flying the narrow body replacement, if it has glass....but well see what the future holds.