ppragman
No pasa nada.
Depends on the equipment.
-mini
Also true, turbojet equipment in pax ops requires an ATP.
135.243a1
Depends on the equipment.
-mini
In my opinion the 1500 hour rule is pointless. If anything I think cross country PIC time is more important then total time. And even 1500 is too much more like 500 is fine. Accidents can happen at any hour amount. The question is really the quality of training. I think the FAA should look into scenario based training. If a pilot wants to work for an airline the FAA should do what they are doing in europe where you have to pass like 14 exams to get your frozen ATP. Then throw them in a sim for 50 hours of scenario based training. Then only then can they fly for an airline. This sounds alot better then, "oh you need 1500 TT." again in my opinion.![]()
1500 hours isn't really that hard to come by if you try.
Are you really learning more by flying the same routes night after night after night, talking to the same controllers that you soon ask how the wife and kids are?
With patience. With the slowdown in the industry and a possibility of regulatory change as well, there will be an unavoidable logjam at the front door. In this case, it's in the low time commercial pilot segment.
Take a note from many users here- notable those like CitationKid, et al, and note that it's not impossible to get ahead with a little hustle.
Flight instructing was always seen as the next step for a newly minted commercial pilot, but was that because so many wanted to do that or because it was simply the lowest hanging fruit?
There are already relatively few vacant CFI positions, and aside from the rare few, most are not flying as much as they'd like to be.
Some years ago, this same argument was being used.
Now, there may be only a few CFI positions available in Michigan, but have you explored the ones in Arizona? Alabama? Utah?
Expand your opportunities, and you'll be surprised!
It is possible, but I think your example of CitationKid is flawed. I've never met him, but I'd bet he's a hell of a pilot, and a hell of a hustler, but you still need luck. I like to consider myself a good pilot, and I'm a hell of a hustler with countless connections, but the time just isn't there.I got my com MEL at 141 minimums and have been stuck. I got lucky too, I'm logging multi turbine pic in the goose, but that isn't going to get me significant time.
Like I said, I've been extremely lucky. I've been flying with my dad since the days that he'd but a car seat in the plane; I soloed at 16, license at 17 etc.
I don't want to be a CFI, but with only 250 hours (a relatively extensive 250 hours), who's going to hire me for anything else?
I've got schooling to take care of first, so I'm pretty limited in where I can go. Another year to go.
Some years ago, this same argument was being used.
Now, there may be only a few CFI positions available in Michigan, but have you explored the ones in Arizona? Alabama? Utah?
Expand your opportunities, and you'll be surprised!
I presume you want to go into the airline business.
They're probably all going to want you to have significant flight experience!
Especially in the corporate world. To drive your limousine, do you want a 16 year old who just passed his DMV test last month or a driver who has a few years of driving under his belt?
For a limo driver? Whoever knows where the cheap hoes and blow are. If they're 18 or 81 it really doesn't matter.....the hoes, not the driver.Especially in the corporate world. To drive your limousine, do you want a 16 year old who just passed his DMV test last month or a driver who has a few years of driving under his belt?
It is possible, but I think your example of CitationKid is flawed. I've never met him, but I'd bet he's a hell of a pilot, and a hell of a hustler, but you still need luck. I like to consider myself a good pilot, and I'm a hell of a hustler with countless connections, but the time just isn't there.I got my com MEL at 141 minimums and have been stuck. I got lucky too, I'm logging multi turbine pic in the goose, but that isn't going to get me significant time.
Like I said, I've been extremely lucky. I've been flying with my dad since the days that he'd but a car seat in the plane; I soloed at 16, license at 17 etc.
I don't want to be a CFI, but with only 250 hours (a relatively extensive 250 hours), who's going to hire me for anything else?
Do you not enjoy that Cessna, or that piston you are pushing now? I don't understand why one can't find a decent paying job instructing, or something else outside of the regionals? Something that you can actually pay back the loan with and actually eat a little bit more than Ramen Noodles?
Listen, I probably had the same optimism as you when I was working toward my private in High School. But after working as a CFI for 3 years, still barely able to keep a roof over my head with two jobs, I really don't appreciate some kid who thinks it's easy to just go out and get a flying job that pays the bills in this economy. Even after thousands of hours of dual given, you are still poor and it doesn't matter if you are flying a jet, you just want to fly a plane that pays the bills. Now go enjoy that dinner mommy prepared for you.
For a limo driver? Whoever knows where the cheap hoes and blow are. If they're 18 or 81 it really doesn't matter.....the hoes, not the driver.
-mini
Do you know how difficult it is to get spat mojito off of a LCD screen?![]()