CDVdriver said:
Nothing personal Enigma, I just got a little agitated that's all.
My apologies.
This guy is asking me if I can help him out get some more experience to make a better chance getting a job in Europe.
Whether we like it or not PFT will not go away, simply because of the supply/demand.
We probably know better then to pay, a lot of these less experienced hope fulls don't.
Nothing we can change about it.
I wish I had $40k extra 4 years ago, I'd be sitting by a window seat eating shrimp and drinking sparkly water iso behind my little screen now.
Anyway any suggestions on where to go not to go?
Thanks,
This thread is ludicrous. You should realize that no one is going to be so bold as to actually suggest a PFT operator on this board. Maybe someone will PM you, who knows. However, most of us have a little INTEGRITY. Many of us have friends who are struggling through the CFI/Banner Tow/135 ranks to land that right seat job and would sooner pimp out our daughters than help some non-english speaking non-qualified jerk buy that job from under their feet.
PFT is NOT inevitable, as you have stated. I happen to work for an airline that at one point in it's history did have a PFT program (not something I'm proud of, and it was before my time). This was a relatively benign sort of PFT because it was single-pilot 135, so the PFT fellow in the right seat wasn't actually taking anyones job. It's never going to happen again, here, and you know why? PFT is UNSAFE. It's putting unqualified people in a position of significant responsibility. It overloads the captain and pisses him/her off, and leads to overall poor moral. I would rather fly in a B1900 with a SINGLE qualified pilot than a B1900 with a qualified captain and an right seat occupant. What kind of CRM can you really expect in an emergency? PFT is not inevitable because most operators recognize that passenger-carrying revenue flights are NOT training flights. The right seat position is FAA mandated on 121 flights for reasons of safety, not training.
Also, you state that "there's nothing that we can do to change it". There's plenty we can do. In fact, the pilot group as a whole has done a remarkable job of limiting the spread of PFT. One of the ways is that PFT guys are stigmatized for the rest of their careers... many consider them scabs. Does your "friend" really want that?
If you had $40k extra 4 years ago and paid for a right-seat 1900 job then you'd probably still be flying a 1900 today, and consider yourself lucky. I doubt the FO would be handing you shrimp and sparkly water. If you have a job now where you sit in front of a computer, then you're probably better off than you would be if you did PFT. If you have that kind of money to throw at your flying career, you're better off just buying the multi time until you can get a legitimate flying job. If I had to do it over again, and I was a 250 hour commercial pilot who's trust fund just handed me $25k, I'd buy 100 multi with the first $10k then put the rest in the bank and work as a CFI until I could land a GOOD regional or corporate job (and I don't mean flying 1900's.)
Europe has a system whereby low-time pilots can become qualified and land a flying job. It is not PFT. I'm not familiar with all the details, but it does sound like your "friend" is unwilling or unqualified to go the normal route, and hence wants to come do PFT in the states. Deez Nutz.