Jetter2 said:
Their instructional oppurtunities arent as good as ATP. Their cross country's arent the same. At ATP, you are actually moving aircraft from school to school as they are needed, so there are no real "out 'n back" X-countrys where its only a few hours.
Also ATP offers Sim training, exactly what your Airline will be conducted in, not an actual aircraft. FTD's aren't an aircraft, there is no "flying by the seat of your pants", it forces you to develop a good instrument scan.
Plus its a 20 minute drive from my house.
No offense, Jetter.... When you become more of an authority on the subject, become an authority on the subject.
ATP's bread and butter training is not conducted during a XC- those AC repositions are done during the "XC" phase of the ACPP in which an instructor isn't on board, while most of the add-on and ACPP training is done locally. I did my best to make every training flight a XC, but when you're limited to two 2.0 hour flights with a specific profile to an airport 15 miles away, you just can't. On top of that, out-and-backs were typical at Dallas.
The FTD argument is a little specious. After instructing at ATP, I flew an FTD during my first 135-job training. It was a Level 6. The only reason I feel that I rocked all over that training was that I had just flown 100 hours of hard IFR in a pressurized Baron by myself over the previous two months. Experience, period. Same goes for the first time I flew in a Level D simulator. Experience ruled the day- you could figure out who had the stick time easily.
The FTD is extremely useful for ironing out the problems the student has, however. Be it SA, a scan, or getting un-flustered during a cascade of bad events, it is a lot cheaper (and safer!) than with the engines running. It is a fully available resource to the students, as well as the instructors. I remember sitting by myself and flying the goofiest approaches I could find, at 10:30 pm, after showing at the airport at 6:-- am, with another show at 6:-- am, only TO FLY IT for the heck out of it. This is with a brand new baby at home!
The FTD time is moot after your commercial checkride. It affords you plenty of experience toward the fundamentals, but I can't really see the translation to the higher level flying that you imply exists.
Incidentally, I flew the 'sim' at ATP Dallas for the FAA for 8 hours during the QTG compliance stuff, making it the only Part 61 sim in the district FAA-authorized to do certain things... I know of what I speak. =]
I would like to take you on a flight in the PC12 or the King Air/Cessna 414/P-Baron I fly, then put you in an AST300. I don't have an FTD available, but I do have plenty of empty right seat time for you- you might have a blast.
You'll see the value in the FTD- it is very real, but real-plane by-yourself-decision-making is where you will learn to be a valued crew member.
If it comes down to Ari-Ben or ATP, it really should hinge on what the gut tells the spender. Period.
Keep pluggin' away. PM me for more info.