1-tacan-rule
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2004
- Posts
- 90
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1-tacan-rule said:Live4:
CP meant co-pilot, not Chief Pilot. Obviously I couldn't be your Chief Pilot if I haven't landed on property yet...but your mistake is understandable since you are run ragged on such a rough schedule.
realityman said:The days can be long, but are never more than 14 hours (assuming you stand up to the company and shut it down at that point). We stay in very nice places most of the time (except when the best hotels truly aren't available, which is rare). We keep our hotel points and airline miles. Crew food is plentiful and of good quality (never heard anyone ever complain of losing weight after starting work with us!). We are REQUIRED to have 10 hours of rest, and if you find your rest being shorted due to late hotel vans, poor check-in procedures, noisy hotel guests, whatever, then you have the option of telling (not asking) the company to give you additional rest. You cannot be extended on the 7/7 schedule, can only be extended once a month for one day on the 17-day schedule, and can generally count on being home after 7 days max on the flex schedule (not to mention having 3 schedules to choose from!).
been-there said:Realtyman, let me apologize. I am sorry for slamming you. You seem like a level headed guy. With the anonymous nature of this board sometimes I write things that are not in the best of taste.
Back to NetJets. There are better jobs and there are worse jobs. I am thankful to be employed by them. Now, on to the minuses:
1.Pay. It is comparable to the regionals.
2.Training. We do a lot, but most of it is worthless.
3.Line Flying. Captains who never swap pax legs, even with co-captains.
4.Local 284.
5.Scheduling.
6.Lack of sleep.
7.Self disclosures.
8.Training Contract.
9.5 year FO pay scale.
10. Airlining.
11. The total CYA mentality on the road.
CE750Driver said:In over 6 years, I have never broken 450 hours of flying in a year.
realityman said:After JB and SWA, I'd like to hear about any other companies (aviation) that treat you as well as NJA does.
njwingman said:In over 6 years, I have, several times.
Ty Webb said:I occaisionally like to check in over here to see what has been going on at NetJets. I had an interview scheduled at EJA when I started at Airtran just after 9/11, so I was following the company with interest before then and still do now.
You said you'd like an airline comparison- I can only speak for my experience at Airtran, but I can tell you that AirTran treats us pretty well . . . . . I was getting 14 days off per month the first year, 15-17 off with most weekends off during the second year, and the third year, well, I almost felt guilty taking their money, I was there so little. . . . . I was able to upgrade to 737NG Capt right at the three-year mark. It looks like the upgrade time will decrease a little this year, maybe as low as 2.5 years to make Capt, so there is good movement.
As for scheduling, the Company can schedule us for a maximum 12 hour duty day, but most days are more like 7-10 hours duty, and we average about 5.5 hours of flying per day, but could be scheduled for a max of 8. . . . anything more than 6 is pretty rare. The beauty of it is that you already knew what this day consisted of a couple of weeks ago when you bid for it, so a lazy guy can bid low-time lines, and a go-getter can go get.
If they cancel a flight, or if you have more than 5 hours waiting time for any reason, they have to put you up in a hotel . . . . not just keep you waiting around the airport.
Downside is going in and out of the same 40-something airports over and over, getting "contract" hotel rooms, and having to deal with the gate, scheduling, dispatch, Operations, flight attendents, etc. . . etc . . . etc. . . . Amazingly enough, a pax from south Boston riding on an $89. ticket will bitch more than a CEO on a $35,000. charter, believe it or not.
Good luck on your contract. We are ramping up for negotiations, too.