Un-Precedent-ed..
mynameisjim said:
That's what it used to be? No.
Talk to some retired guys who will tell you that showing up with a pulse is what it used to be. Come with a commercial single and we'll give you your multi in Super Connie class.
I think the real problem is that regional jets used to be flown by high time guys in the late 90's, so the jet training was geared for that. That time is gone, but the training hasn't changed yet.
Okay some truth to this...but the rest of the story...
There was a time many years ago that airlines hired people with NO pilot experience and trained them thereselves. (It may come to that agian......hold it they are but you are paying for it! And yes if you go through one of these training schools to get your job placement (you paid for your job), stop lying to yourselves.)
Yes, some old timers (that have just retired recently) got hired with a pulse and 100 multi and 1200 ish hours tt years ago. You also would be on the Panel for a few years (watching and playing almost pilot / FE) then FO in a three person a/c. Again minimun responibilities. Then Captain. Years down the road after a vetting process. Back then if you could not upgrade then you got fired.
Again, not the norm...right? Of course...it changed again very quickly. The Hiring Stops and when the airlines go back to hiring, the pool of pilots is far more experienced. Up go the standards of the interview-iessss.
Again, Back to the modern times....the mid 90's after a hiring stoppage....the airlines started hiring again. The pilot pool again was high time. The pilots who could not get hired at these places went to the PAY FOR TRAINING companies (ie COMAIR and the such). In 1996 I went to American Eagle. The AVERAGE COMPETITIVE pilot time was 6000 hours tt (and yes the AE training program is/was written around a 6000 hour pilot). I had almost 5000 tt at the time. ALL multi. and >85% turbine. I was competive with exception of tt. The average upgrade time (after the hiring started again) at AE was 12 years in a turbo-prop at the time. So, yes we got high time RJ captains when we got RJ's. And, yes the training program was written for HIGH TT pilots (both Capt./and FO).
Seasoning is seasoning in the airline industry.
This current time frame is UN-Precedent-ed in the history of American Airline Industry History.
A great opportunity for sure.
But at wages of unskilled labor due to unskilled labor usage. And it is our fault that it is going on. We love to fly. They know it. You want to fly our shinny machine young man...Yes Sir...well you have to Pay Your Dues....at this rate you'll be paying your dues for the rest of your lives.
If you stopped paying for your job at these schools to feed the regional airlines a couple of things would happen:(ie GulfStream International types of operations.)
1. Like the rest of the world...Airlines would test youths for aptitude for aviation and pay for ALL of their training to become Airline Pilots.
2. It would stop the growth of the regionals and return flying to the main lines.
3. It would be on the merits of your abilities (skills NOT the ability to pay for) that you would get hired.
4. A more/better training program of young pilots being placed into 121 operations. (Just like the rest of the world that has such programs.)
BTW IF this does not apply to you don't take it personally. Thanks