airspeed said:
What makes me sick is you people that come in and say you'll work for practically nothing and do anything to fly because you have no shame. [/B]
Agreed Airspeed. As an ex-corporate/current airline guy who spent 9 months on furlough last year before being hired by a new company, the one thing I never considered was going out and screwing the cororate guys by undercutting the going market rates for contract pilots. It's the height of hypocricy for a major airline furloughee to whine about how they are being "undercut" by regional pilots because they fly for less, while at the same time hoe-ing themselves out in a different sector of commercial flying.
The irony seems completely lost on them; that these mostly union-members, who understandibly go ballistic at what scabs do and the downward pressure on wages they have, are essentially doing the same thing. They have been so brainwashed into believing that the "market rate" for pilot services is driven soley by what a union negotiates in a contract, that upon entering a union-free sector of aviation, they believe that no rate exists at all. This is convenient, for it allows them to remain "guilt-free" in their own minds. No unions = no blacklists to worry about no matter what you do.
Chalk it up to ignorance. The majority of major airline pilots have no idea to the real nature of true corporate flying (confusing it wih charter, fractionals, etc), and the vast majority are completely clueless when it comes to Independent Contract flying, the going rates for acting as PIC/SIC on different types of equipment, or where to find out what they are in the first place.
When I was the Chief Pilot for a small corporate operation and occasionally needed a standby SIC, there were a few airline guys around offering to do it for amounts like $200 a day, when the going rate back then for that type of aircraft in the right seat was twice that amount. Frankly, I found it insulting to the profession that they figured the job (and consequently my passengers) were worth so little, so needless to say they were shown the door, and a couple of 1500 hr. line service personnel working for the FBO we were based at got the training and right seat check-outs in their first jet instead. They were paid the $400 per day while out on a trip, whether flying or sitting in the hotel. That's just the way it works.
I promise you airspeed, you didn't see me out there hoe-ing myself when I was furloughed, nor will you if it happens again.