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the right road to a career in NJ ?

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The "quality" of your time is irrelevant if you dont meet the minimums for the job. Get the minimums, apply, and then work on "quality" time to help push your resume into the top of the pile.

Good luck! You'll get there.
 
Hey Diesel,

Put down the beer and read the post sober before the reply!!!!! Otherwise I might come to Beantown and take you to school on how to behave when your totally wasted.
 
KeroseneDream said:
Hmm...I'd expand the horizon to type of operation. I agree that SIC in a caravan or PC-12 ain't much when trying to qualify for FedEx, but by that rationale Part 121 1900 SIC time should not be logged as TT, as the type only requires one pilot. That would DQ a lot of current NJ pilots from the hiring mins.

Ok Kerosene, it has been a while since I flew the 1900, but if I remember correctly it required 2 (two) pilots on the type certificate. If it was operated with just one pilot it was on a single pilot wavier.
 
With 2000tt I'd say it's time to turn your SIC into PIC in the same type aircraft. Find other operators with the same plane and work that left seat time. After logging some legal PIC parlay that into some multi PIC or turbine/jet SIC with the chance of multi PIC.

However you do it - don't give up and keep networking!!
 
actually i wasn't wasted. Bored in a hotel room.

Sorry i thought he ment logging sic in a plane that isn't required for sic.
 
Fozzy said:
Only if you have the single pilot sign off on your type. So two pilots are required for most BE1900 ops.

Apparently my lack of explanation of the Beech 1900 has sidetracked this thread. So I will clarify.

The Beech 1900 is type certified as a single pilot aircraft. Many Cargo outfits operate it as such. There is no such thing as a "single-pilot signoff", only an "SIC required" restriction. Part 121 requires two pilots for passenger operations, thus most air carrier training programs are set up only to train two pilot crew operations. So when a type rating is issued under one of the training programs the "SIC required" limitation is placed on the ATP certificate. This has nothing to do with the type certification of the aircraft, only to do with items tested on a checkride. Another example of this training restriction is many 121 operaters place "Circle to land in VFR only" restrictions on a jet type rating on an applicants ATP certificate. This is not a restriction based on operating limitations of the aircraft, but of the training program.

I am not as familiar with the 135 passenger carrying regs as I am the 121. My understanding though, is that carraige of passengers requires either two pilots or an auto-pilot in lieu of the second pilot. Thus an aircraft carrying pax lacking an autopilot would require two pilots.

My original reply was intended mainly to make the point that what time can legally go in the book vs. what a company may actually view as quality time are two very different things. A subject that has been discusses at length in previous FlightInfo threads.

Sorry for the hijack and I hope I have not created any further confusion.
 
Sorry about the single pilot sign off wording. A bit of slang. I have BTDT with the mighty D in 121 land. Most of the IP's had the SIC required removed from their type at our upstate outfit. Just trying to make a point in not so many words. But I guess there are just to many legal types out there.
Mine says SIC required if anyone cares, I am not to be trusted alone in the D.
As for all the rest, what you said.
 
Fozzy,

All you needed to do was spend a little time in cargoland. SIC required's got cleared in a nanosecond. I've done both 1900 and Metro as single pilot flying freight.

To the youngsters out there - take the 1900 any day. The Metro hasn't earned it's bad reputation for nothing.
 

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