Re: Tradition
Dean said:
Im confused because I read alot about how that aviators up in the ranks dont give darn about where you learned to fly as long as you do what you were hired on to do.
Let me un-confuse you, then. PFT guys were hired on to line the pockets of their company and fill a seat.
You walked right into that one, Dean. Sorry
)
When you PFT, you may get hours in your log that are more impressive, but the reason these hours are impressive is that you are assuming these hours logged imply the level of knowledge, skill, and responsibility normally required to log those hours. When you pay to sit in the seat, the normal pre-requisites of knowledge, skill, and responsibility aren't there anymore. That is how the hours that a PFT pilot logs aren't comparable to those of a non-PFT position, and why many would hire a CFI before a PFT. The PFT guy may be an excellent pilot who would fit into the company 'like a glove', but the mere payment for hours leaves the interviewer no objective way of evaluating the PFT applicant's ability (I'll leave the character debate for another time)
Dean, you generally sound as if you're level headed when you ask questions, and then, when accepted industry standards are brought up to answer your questions, you call their views as 'out-of-touch' or 'not representative of the majority'. Since you are not a professional pilot, than how do you profess to know what is 'in-touch' or what the majority of us might think about an issue you don't even fully understand? (though I admire you for trying to)
When you interview, pilots are hiring you based on your ability to be a good captain, a leader and your 'fit' within the company (for instance, it was recently pointed out that JetBlue pilots help clean their aircraft. If you think cleaning is beneath a pilot, then you might not be a good fit at 'Blue). In short, could I, the interviewer, sit in a cockpit with you for a month and not go crazy. And if I did, and subsequently passed out, could you then take command of the aircraft, the passengers, the crew, and the situation and land the plane safely (ideally without the passengers even noticing that command of the aircraft had changed). When you PFT, your position in the right seat and your hours do not demonstrate anything interviewers can draw upon to objectively determine whether they should hire you. At best, the experience is seen as merely experience (and 250 hours of any experience from a Cub to Concorde isn't going to get you anywhere these days!). At worst, it's a 1-way ticket to a rejection letter.
-Boo!
bobbysamd said:
Maybe MAPD might be for you.
No you di' ent', Bobby! PFT'ing guys would fit in at Freedom, though. A decision that would possibly advance my career at the expense of my fellow pilots? Its PFT, its Freedom, its Republic, its . . .
not a wise career move.