jrh
Well-Known Member
If the owner would have walked up to any of you CFIs and said "take my plane and put 10 hours on it (free)," every one of you would have jumped on it without a question asked.
Not me.
If the owner would have walked up to any of you CFIs and said "take my plane and put 10 hours on it (free)," every one of you would have jumped on it without a question asked.
Same. I guess neither of us are grateful enough...or somethin.:dunno:Not me.
Same. I guess neither of us are grateful enough...or somethin.:dunno:
Here's a question for any experienced pilot... Therefore I'm also going to assume you're well established in your career as a professional pilot. Now, let's say the OP's potential employer had met *you* right now, at this point in your career. He says, "Hey, I'd really like you to be my pilot. You'll need to get time in the plane for insurance though."
Would *you* charge him? Or on your days off, are you so itching to go get qualified for another job that you'd fly around for free, just happy to be there? If so, why? If not, why not?
This whole thread isn't a question of what's right or wrong. It's a discussion of how desperate for a job one needs to be before they start flying for free.
No. I thank him for his plane and generous offer, and go fly it. ( It can be a very good asset if you don't let your ego get in the way.)NJA_Capt: Based on your name, I'm assuming you are ... well established in your career as a professional pilot.
Would *you* charge him?
No. But I have something called integrity. It has nothing to do with flying for free. The ONLY person deserving payment for his time is the CFI that did the OP's checkout.on your days off, are you so itching to go get qualified for another job that you'd fly around for free, just happy to be there? If so, why? If not, why not?
Frankly. It comes off as desperate (for payment)No, it's because neither of us is desperate.
basically what Steve saidAnyway, if the guy came to me and said "I'd like you to be my pilot" I would probably only agree to fly for him if; 1) I liked him, 2) I was interested in the type of flying he wanted done, 3) I could pick and choose flights based on my schedule which implies that, 4) he has one or more alternate pilots available, and, 5) he was willing to pay *enough* to make it worth my while.
Ding, Ding, Ding. No more calls. We have a winner.I think too many people are screaming the "I won't work for free" mantra without thoroughly considering the Pros/Cons and seeing that you really are not working for free if you consider the long term payback.
Anyway, if the guy came to me and said "I'd like you to be my pilot" I would probably only agree to fly for him if; 1) I liked him, 2) I was interested in the type of flying he wanted done, 3) I could pick and choose flights based on my schedule which implies that, 4) he has one or more alternate pilots available, and, 5) he was willing to pay *enough* to make it worth my while.
If all 5 conditions were met I'd be happy to do 10 hours of dual to meet insurance requirements if needed, without charging him an hourly rate for my time. If he's willing to spring for 10 hours of flight time with an instructor in a piston single just to meet insurance, I'm willing to invest the time to be eligible to earn some decent side money from him.
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I'm guessing that some of you guys wouldn't agree with what I'd do in this situation, and that's fine. We all follow our own moral compass in these situations, and mine says that if all of the preconditions that I outlined were met, then obviously the guy wants me to fly for him for reasons above and beyond simple economic ones.
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I disagree and the reasoning that I gave above outlines how I would do that flying without compensation, and I wouldn't be doing it out of desperation.
I think too many people are screaming the "I won't work for free" mantra without thoroughly considering the Pros/Cons and seeing that you really are not working for free if you consider the long term payback.
If the owner wants to pay you for that, and that is arranged up front, do it, I have. But thinking you are owed it, just because you "Won't work for free", when the owner is not aware of it......just bad form.
However, I can't help but notice how your words could be applied to almost any PFT scheme.
"But, but, but...you'll get a bunch of cross country time!"
"But, but, but...you'll get a bunch of twin time!"
"But, but, but...you'll get a bunch of turbine time!"
The cycle never ends.
If I came across as harping on "Not doing it for free" that was not my intent, I have been paid for more of these than the one I did for free. Just that expecting payment for something that is debatable as to being work at all without the check writer being aware of the expectation for payment as being foolish, and frankly a bit arrogant. That was more directed at the "Never work for free" crowd.I agree completely. As I've said all along, the key is for both parties to be on the same page.
My main concern with all of this is that some people seemed to be dogging on the OP for not doing the checkout for free. Some people acted as though the OP should have happily hopped in for free no matter what.
My point is that the OP was not out of line in wanting to be compensated for his time. He wasn't being unreasonable. He wasn't looking a gift horse in the mouth.
I would have done the same. I just would have done it with better communication from the start.