1) Do you feel you might be overburdened by trying to provide instruction to an FO in a difficult wx situation (like an approach to mins in icing conditions and poor runway situations)? Might this ever compromise the safety of the flight?
No, the Captain should determine how much "instruction" is taking place during difficult times. Sitting in a deice line is a great time to discuss cold-weather gotchas, the finer points of paperwork, etc, to the new FO. If workload allows, druing an arrival I can see a number of factors worth of discussion, again time permitting. But talking an FO through an approach can get sketchy. As a captain you can offer lots of input, but ultimately there is a crisp line that has to be identified, can the FO fly the procedure or not? If he can, great, and pointers may be offered. If he can't, then more drastic measures must be taken.
I'm all for letting FO's totally dick up visual approaches. I'm convinced they learn more from one missed (or almost missed) approach than 100 good ones and 10,000 words of caution from me. However I'm against learning to fly an ILS, or learning X-wind landings with paying part 121 passengers in the back. Several incidents over the past few years in which line check airman forgot their mission - prevent the new FO from damaging the aircraft and damaging the people/cargo. I've been an LCA, it's not easy to be certain. But there's no excuse for letting your charge bend the airplane. That's why we get an override. For the line captain, the same goes. It's a condition of upgrading that you'll have to babysit some FOs. Simply part of the territory. Also a reason why flight instructing prior to the airline job is so valuable. The CFI has hopefully developed the ability to teach, to correct, and to babysit during their time in the pattern. This transfers very well to the captain's seat.
2) Do you believe you are being properly compensated for wearing two hats on one flight? (Capt and CFI, as it were)
As a line check airman, no. The 28% pay premium didn't compensate for the doubled stress level and the trebled workload. The organization used IOE as a band-aid for startlingly hurried training. The instructors coax a few decent landings and an ILS out of the candidates and shuffle them through the door, making the best out of the severly limited resources at their disposal; No FTD, limited sim time, aircraft time, and human material. The "rough edges" that are then seen during IOE aren't even rough, they're downright jagged. As a line Captain, I think it's basiacally fair. There's a reason why CA's are paid 40%-ish more than the FO, and this is a large part of it. We're paid to teach, as well as excercise the judgement and employ the storehouse of wisdom that comes with experience. The small percentage of the time that line catains fly with weak FOs is just part of the territory.
3) How would you react to flying with someone with just 70TT in a cockpit, and lots of sim time? This is actually being suggested overseas, and I am curious what your reactions will be.
Simulators cannot create fear. Stress, yes. But not the raw, visceral fear of your arse in a flying beer can about to make an unscheduled arrival in a forest because numbnuts (me) negelected to keep the oil pressure gauge in the scan. Or the auto-rough felt when numbnuts (me) decides to take the C182 over the blue-water shortcut to Cape Cod, and starts wondering just how cold that water is. Or when the cockpit starts filling with smoke on the proverbial dark and strormy night (me). Or when a poorly planned summer takeoff nearly results in some tree trimming with the main gear (me). And then almost hitting a different stand of trees for the same reason during the same summer (me again). Or just the single-pilot, single-engine, night IMC over the mountains in the ice at 2am, nodding off because I've been awake for 20 hours and spent 9 of them flying, too tired to realized I'm petrified (me). Or hitting an adult doe while landing (same night). That's just a smattering of the crap that transpires during one's first 1200 hours in the general aviation world. An FO that doesn't get that experience will probably function alright, and might make a good captain - 10 or 15 years from now. But handling crazy problems on your own lays the foundations for quality decision making later on as a competent FO and as pilot in command. The JAA MCPL (Multi Crew Pilot's License) is a very bad idea. For more on that topic
[URL]http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthread.php?t=244114[/URL]
Sorry for the very long-winded, JediNein sounding post.