crazyjeep
Well-Known Member
Would you want to deal with a surgeon who had never seen a scalpel 90 days ago? [/QUOTE]
I wouldnt want that surgeon, but, like all jobs they had to start somewhere. Somewhere along the line there was a first, where they had an experienced surgeon oversee the newbie to make sure nothing went wrong. Not saying 1500 TT is a bad idea, or even a good idea. But the path from private to right seat cloudy right now for alot of good reasons.
First, it can cost alot to get your CFI. Second, you need to find students to teach(ultimately this is a big pyramid scheme). Down the road there is going to be a need for 135 pilots, corporate pilots, etc. Eventually, I forsee a demand for pilots to grow because of this bill, but what happens when they have to cancel flights because there arent enough qualified pilots to fit in the 1500 hour rule to replace those retiring? This rule will be retracted just like the age 60 rule was changed. Two pilots up front with 1500 hrs are better than having a 250 hour in the right seat, but does it make it more safe than it currently is? Has there been a study that shows having a 250 hr pilot as a FO being a direct cause to an increase in accidents?
IMO this legislation is on based on fear. People are trying to tie safety to TT. I think training has alot to so with safety, and they dont just hire a 250 hour pilot and throw them in the right seat and see if they sink or swim. They go through weeks of training, and once they are fit in the eyes of their instructors they are let go, but let go with someone with 1500+ TT...usually considerably more. All this hype, and hee haw I think in several years, maybe a decade will be mute. I highly doubt that this bill will increase wages enough to convince pilots to switch from 135 to 121, or even a boost to QOL.
Anyways. I'm off to deice. Ive only got a high school degree and 200 hours in the bucket, does that make me want to be any less safe and competent to make sure my aircraft are clean of contaminants? You have to experience the job, to build the knowledge and experience to do the job well. Once I have built 1500 hrs CFIing, it doesn't mean I can fly a regional jet any better, but I'll be wickedly awesome demonstrating PTS standards on all the private/commercial maneuvers.
Safe flying folks.
I wouldnt want that surgeon, but, like all jobs they had to start somewhere. Somewhere along the line there was a first, where they had an experienced surgeon oversee the newbie to make sure nothing went wrong. Not saying 1500 TT is a bad idea, or even a good idea. But the path from private to right seat cloudy right now for alot of good reasons.
First, it can cost alot to get your CFI. Second, you need to find students to teach(ultimately this is a big pyramid scheme). Down the road there is going to be a need for 135 pilots, corporate pilots, etc. Eventually, I forsee a demand for pilots to grow because of this bill, but what happens when they have to cancel flights because there arent enough qualified pilots to fit in the 1500 hour rule to replace those retiring? This rule will be retracted just like the age 60 rule was changed. Two pilots up front with 1500 hrs are better than having a 250 hour in the right seat, but does it make it more safe than it currently is? Has there been a study that shows having a 250 hr pilot as a FO being a direct cause to an increase in accidents?
IMO this legislation is on based on fear. People are trying to tie safety to TT. I think training has alot to so with safety, and they dont just hire a 250 hour pilot and throw them in the right seat and see if they sink or swim. They go through weeks of training, and once they are fit in the eyes of their instructors they are let go, but let go with someone with 1500+ TT...usually considerably more. All this hype, and hee haw I think in several years, maybe a decade will be mute. I highly doubt that this bill will increase wages enough to convince pilots to switch from 135 to 121, or even a boost to QOL.
Anyways. I'm off to deice. Ive only got a high school degree and 200 hours in the bucket, does that make me want to be any less safe and competent to make sure my aircraft are clean of contaminants? You have to experience the job, to build the knowledge and experience to do the job well. Once I have built 1500 hrs CFIing, it doesn't mean I can fly a regional jet any better, but I'll be wickedly awesome demonstrating PTS standards on all the private/commercial maneuvers.
Safe flying folks.