Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Whats it like flying for connie?

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

i fly boxes

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2006
Posts
848
Hello, I was wondering if you guys could help. I currently am a regional pilot, and I live in the Detroit Area. I have had my eye on Kallita for a while. I have 1800 hours, which are below the times that they say are competitive, but I was wondering if I would have a chance.

If someone that works there could answer the following questions as well, that would be great. I know nothing about bigger cargo ops

What is your quality of life like (especially if you live in YIP area)?
Are the airplanes taken care of pretty well?
Where do you see the company in 10 years, will they stick with the classics, or will they go on to more modern airplanes in the future?
What is a typical schedule like?
 
i fly boxes said:
Hello, I was wondering if you guys could help. I currently am a regional pilot, and I live in the Detroit Area. I have had my eye on Kallita for a while. I have 1800 hours, which are below the times that they say are competitive, but I was wondering if I would have a chance.

If someone that works there could answer the following questions as well, that would be great. I know nothing about bigger cargo ops

What is your quality of life like (especially if you live in YIP area)?
Are the airplanes taken care of pretty well?
Where do you see the company in 10 years, will they stick with the classics, or will they go on to more modern airplanes in the future?
What is a typical schedule like?

OK

falcon20driver said:
With 4200 hours you're right in there dude, they're probably looking for some multi turbine PIC, a friend just hired on there had a couple thousand hours B-1900 PIC.

HMMmmmm :confused:

If you have 1800 hours, I doubt you'll fly for Connie for quite some time.
If you have 4200 hours, I'd say apply, but make sure the ink has dried on your logbook :rolleyes:
 
We work 17 days a month usually straight, but not all the lines are this way. You are gone the whole time. Ewr/Jfk go East bound to Belgium and Amsterdam continuing through to Dubai, Bahrain, Kuwait then backwards or to Hong Kong. Also Pacific runs Lax-Hnl, some Incheon and of course Hong Kong, and returning through ANC. Some Mac trips and Afghanistan, Turkey pop up sometimes.
Quality of life is subjective, scheduling is terrible-half or more of the crews don't fly as published. Management pilot relations are bad-stalled contract talks for 3 years. Pay is bad first year a little better after, still substandard.
 
I guess the big question, for me anyway, is where will the company be in 10 years? I know this is the airline biz, but do you see them around at all in 10-15?

Thanks.
 
Fly'in for Connie

As soon as we get through this contract negotiations and get a decent contract, this will be the place to be. The company is profitable, Connie owns all the airplanes outright, just baught a 747 Classis Simulator and built a new training facility in YIP, is upgrading all the planes to EFIS/Glass cockpits, Jepp Electronic Flight Bag. Quick upgrade time to left seat, probably better than any other carrier out there.
 
Junkflyer said:
We work 17 days a month usually straight, but not all the lines are this way. You are gone the whole time. Ewr/Jfk go East bound to Belgium and Amsterdam continuing through to Dubai, Bahrain, Kuwait then backwards or to Hong Kong. Also Pacific runs Lax-Hnl, some Incheon and of course Hong Kong, and returning through ANC. Some Mac trips and Afghanistan, Turkey pop up sometimes.
Quality of life is subjective, scheduling is terrible-half or more of the crews don't fly as published. Management pilot relations are bad-stalled contract talks for 3 years. Pay is bad first year a little better after, still substandard.

Interesting, 6,7,8 years ago guys were saying the same thing about Polar and Atlas. It will be interesting to see where Kalitta ends up if they get a new CBA.
 
Kikuchiyo said:
Where in Afghanistan are you going? I presume OAKB (Kabul), but I hadn't seen a Connie bird there.
We had just a couple of charters into Kabul last year, bringing in stuff for the elections. It's not a regular place we go. We also don't go to Kuwait anymore.

Ten years from now? Who knows. How did Express One (the 727 operator) look 10 years ago. How did Atlas look 10 years ago? Two very different outcomes...
 
This was my itinerary last month.

Company ticket from home to LGA, limo to EWR (ron), fly Liege, Belgium (ron), fly Incirlik, Turkey, Hong Kong (ron, ron), fly Khabarovsk, Russia, Anchorage (ron), fly Incheon, S. Korea (ron), fly Anchorage (ron), fly LAX (ron, ron), fly HNL (ron), fly Pago Pago (ron), fly Guam, Hong Kong (ron, ron, ron), fly Khabarovsk, Anchorage, deadhead ORD, airline ticket home. Sixteen days on the road, 65 hours pay.

I'm very happy with day to day job. All flights are well catered, and international hotels are very nice. I don't mind flying and I don't mind sitting. I'm OK with 60 or so hours guarantee, though every other month I've had more than 80. Some guys don't like to sit as you only get one hour plus per diem if you sit on the road a day and don't go over guarantee. They want more money. I understand how they feel but I don't feel that way. I'm happy being well-rested and enjoy our layover locations.

This is my fourth airline job and overall the one I enjoy most. Where will it be in 10 years? Who the hell knows? The only thing certain in aviation these days is that nothing is certain. My advice is enjoy each day, prepare for the worst, and take it as it comes.

Cheers,
 
NJA bound said:
That sounds like a blast, hope to get to see some of those countries someday. Do you all let frac pilots jumpseat?
Because we don't have a cockpit door, the requirements for jumpseat are higher than for normal airlines. There aren't any fractional companies on the list. There are 22 airlines that can jumpseat on us but there is a much longer list of airlines that we can jumpseat on. The disparity is because of the additional requirements that jumpseaters have to go through to jumpseat on us.
 
Are they need to interview for the April class or are there poolies swimming and waiting? Thanks in advance!
 

Latest resources

Back
Top