justApilot
Dawn Patroller
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2002
- Posts
- 346
Sheik….I agree his total time was on the low side when he got that right seat jet job. How about if he had 600 hours is that enough time? 1000?3000 hours? Don’t ride him because he got a break. There are some very skilled 250 hour pilots out there. Don’t compare his easy road to your years of gaining the quality time you needed for your first turbine job. We all have to gain experience somehow and took many different roads to get it. Don’t military pilots check out in fighters at something like 300 hours? How about a 250 hour flight instructor? He is gaining experience and hopefully passing on his knowledge and experience to his students. How about the 250 hour VFR freight hauler? Jump pilot? Banner tower? Now how about the 250 hour bizjet FO. Isn’t he looking for experience? Atleast he is supervised by a Captain! And hopefully that Captain is molding his FO into a Captain by teaching him everything that he knows. When I flew bizjets as an IOE Captain, I flew with pilots with all levels of flight experience. Some were experienced turbine pilots and others had never flown anything larger than a small piston twin. Some of the lesser experienced were better sticks. I once flew with a guy who got a break (his old man flew for us). He had attended an accelerated course and I think in six months he had gone from no time to a wet commercial ticket. After he attended FSI/Simuflite, I flew with him for a month. What a great stick. Once you get used to thinking 8 miles a minute it is all instrument flying. You gain experience along the way whether it being in the right seat of a bizjet, instructing in a piston, single pilot freight hauling, flying jumpers, etc. etc. You are not born with it. At 250 hours haven’t we been taught everything as far as FARs, instrument procedures, AIM, holding procedures, etc, etc. Obviously he is not ready for a double generator failure, low on gas, dark, stormy, snowy, 200 and a half night with the winds gusting to 35 ninety degrees off the nose. That is why you pair him with an experience Captain. Now we have to apply all of that training and knowledge. At 250 hours we should have all the essentials of a professional pilot, now we need the experience. . At 250 hours have we experience everything there is to experience? Absolutely not! Experience is gained over time. Every once in a while I see or hear something that I haven’t seen or heard before. Everytime I flew with a guy that had never flown a jet I thought back to the old crusty captains that I had flown with as a newbie. They had handed down an enourmous amount of knowledge, some good and some bad. It was all experience. I learned more STUFF….from them! At the time when I was a bizjet Captain, I would tell our new Captains that it is up to them to help the FO’s grow into the left seat. Give them all of your knowledge. Teach them everything you know! . As far as the paying passenger is concerned, well what can I say. Just because your FO or Captain has umpteen thousands of hours, doesn’t make him a good pilot. Comon guys you know the pilots I am talking about. Hours alone do not make a good pilot.
Anyway that is where I am coming from. Enough rambling. It is time to change a diaper and have a beer. Not necessarily in that order.
Anyway that is where I am coming from. Enough rambling. It is time to change a diaper and have a beer. Not necessarily in that order.