Gulfstream 200
Database Expert
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2002
- Posts
- 4,574
Certainly no disrespect intended, but I can't for the life of me see how being a PIC on an RJ versus an *experienced* SIC makes one iota of difference in ability. The original poster has been at it long enough for most pilots to be a competent PIC, but seniority and industry movement hasn't provided him the opportunity to sit 24" to the left.
As someone who has flown in both airline and charter environments, I see very little difference between the two positions after a certain amount of time (unless the pilot is flat-out incompetent and has no leadership skills, which is usually readily apparent after an interview/tech eval).
Again, I certainly don't intend for this to be disrespectful, as I'm sure you weren't trying to be. Within the business jet industry, I just find it funny when some Beechjet captain looks down on me because I'm new to the company/not a PIC yet, despite the fact that I crossed the Atlantic 6 times in the last two months in a G-ride.
No disrespect taken!..(its a message board)
There is, however, a BIG difference in the two positions (PIC vs SIC)
Anyone can cross the Atlantic making HF reports in the right seat of a "G Ride" (Gulfsteam?) and anyone can learn to fly one by simply attending FSI. Reality is an initial is hardly a blip in a budget.
BUT...most places cant/dont want to teach someone how to make hard decisions. We can send that Beechjet PIC to FSI and 4 weeks later he's still a Captain, just pushing different switches.
My only point was all SIC time on a resume is a huge red flag to most people I know. I dont care if its a King Air, a Citiation, or a G850...most people just want to see that you have made the hard decisions, answered the angry boss in the proper way, stuck out your neck and cancelled a critical trip because it was the right thing to do, made an MEL work, etc etc...
No hard and fast rules in this business, just my observation.