All
I think anybody who has read a previous TAB Express thread knows I instruct there in the King Air. I want to reiterate that I am a part-time training captain and am definitely not trying to sell the place to anybody.
I got a PM from cyork 25, and I want to post most of what I said to him. Many of you may know my friend Doug Taylor. Like he says on his forum, he would like to keep things basically public so everyone can benefit from the interchange of info. In that vein, I feel I should post what I told cyork25, so you can learn/respond/flame
The reference to "Brian" has to do with a friend of cyork25 who works for XXXJet (de-identified) Brian recommended he find a local 141 school to train at. Brian thought that TAB wouldn't teach "basic airmanship" and that because of the "canned flt plans" we use a TAB student wouldn't learn basic flight planning. Brian was also concerned about not having a CFI after finishing up at TAB and what do you do if you don't get hired right away by an airline (a legitimate concern and a real problem).
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Hi cyork25
I got your e-mails, sorry I didn't respond more
quickly, but I was flying at TAB yesterday.
I respect your friend Brian's concerns, but they are
totally unfounded (except for the one about what do you
do if you don't get a regional airline job).
Again, I'm not in sales at TAB, and I want you to do
what's right for you. I'm definitely not trying to get
you to attend. But, here's the reality.
Brian expressed concern about "canned flight plans" and
METARS/TAFS/NOTAMS. I guess he wouldn't like military
trained pilots, because they very rarely file FAA
flight plans!! They only know how to file out of their
base ops on a military flt plan form.
At TAB, you will do more flight planning and filing
than any other place I know of, because you do more
cross country flying than anywhere else. The "canned"
aspect of the flt plan is over-rated by Mitch. When I
went up to Florence, SC yesterday, we did every bit of
flt planning, to include getting all our weather and
NOTAM info. We did performance and weight and balance
planning and reviewed our "canned" flight plan. When we
call the FSS to file, we give the specialist our
"canned number". All this does is cut down on a bunch
of telephone talking. We have definitely gone over all
aspects of the flight plan. When talking with the FSS
specialist, we only have to change anything different,
such as our alternate airport, number of people on
board, fuel, etc.
Brian would be very impressed with our flight planning
before a flight if he saw it. I would say that any TAB
grad could plan and file a XXXXJet flight plan if they
were given the aircraft performance/fuel numbers. They
have experience working in the flight levels and flying
DP's and STARS during their flights at TAB, and they
certainly know all about getting METARS/TAFS/NOTAMS and
filing flight plans with the FSS. We go to big airports
where we get our clearance from Clearance Delivery
before taxi, and we fly out of KDED where we generally
pick up our IFR clearance after takeoff. TAB pilots
know ALL aspects of flt planning and how to work with
ATC in many different situations.
Brian is concerned about "basic airmanship". I think
his concern is that you learn a lot by teaching as a
CFI for several years. This is true. I love
instructing, and have learned a lot teaching people to
fly. But, teaching slow flight, stalls, takeoffs and
landings, etc. in a Cessna 152 for 2 years is not
required to learn "basic airmanship". When you train
for your Pvt and Comm ratings at TAB, you will get all
the same "basic airmanship" training you would get at
any other school.
At TAB, you will learn more "ADVANCED airmanship" than
any other place I know except the military. At TAB you
will fly an 11 hour Familiarization stage of training
in the actual King Air aircraft before you start doing
the 100 hours of LOFT/IOE cross-countrys. In the King
Air, we will go out and do steep turns, slow flight,
stall series, Vmc demos, rapid decompression/emergency
descents, engine out procedures in flight, and
single-engine landings in the actual aircraft. This is
training that virtually no one else (except the
military and some regional airlines) does in such a
high perfomance aircraft. This kind of stuff is done
almost exclusively in simulators these days. I'm pretty
sure XXXXJet doesn't do steep turns, stalls, emerg
descents and single-engine work in their actual
aircraft. You will not be short-changed in any area of
"basic airmanship". I think you will be MUCH better
prepared to enter training at your regional airline
than somebody who has been a Cessna CFI for a couple of
years.
Brian's concern about "what do you do if you don't get
hired when you graduate" is a problem. There are a lot
of King Airs and other high perfomance aircraft out
there, but you will be quite low-time, and the CFI is
the most marketable rating that will get you a job to
earn money (very little as a CFI) while you are waiting
to get hired by a regional airline. I would recommend
to any pilot that loves flying to get a CFI, even just
to do some instructing on the side. With the hours and
knowledge you have from TAB, you can get a CFI fairly
cheaply if you don't get hired right away.
The real good thing about TAB is, Mitch has told me
that if you do not get hired right away and do go out
and get a CFI and work as a flight instructor (or
non-flying job for that matter), TAB will always bring
you back for some sim and King Air flying in the future
to get you spun up for an interview when you get one
later in the future.
If Brian has any other concerns about the program, have
him give me a call. Feel free to forward him this
e-mail if you like. As a Delta pilot, I just do this
part-time because I enjoy mentoring the next generation
of airline pilots such as you. I think we have a
good program at TAB, very similar to the military.
After your "primary training" getting your
Pvt/Comm/ME/Instrument ratings, other school's
"advanced training" is getting you a CFI. You really
aren't learning anything advanced, just how to teach
all the basic stuff you just learned. TAB's "advanced
training" is truly advanced. You learn to fly a
turbine-powered, pressurized, radar equiped airplane
like we fly them in the airlines.
Give me a call or drop me an e-mail any time if you
have other questions. I wish you the best as you start
out your career in the field that I love and has been
so good to me.