lightswitch
New Member
I’ve been reading this forum for a while now, and airlinepilotforums.com, and I just watched that PBS documentary “Flying Cheap”. I am considering training to become a pilot (currently am a mechanical engineer chained to desk; it blows). Military is not an option for me.
Everything I have heard thus far is extremely discouraging. Flight school costs $20k maybe, people say, while you can expect to earn less than that when you get out and into your first job. You only get paid for the time you actually spend flying, not all the time you spend doing paperwork and waiting between flights. Expect to spend up to 16 hours, the legal limit, flying – that’s got to amount to 20 hour days. When do you eat and sleep? More importantly, what do you eat and where do you sleep? I’ve seen that crash pads website specifically for pilots, I’ve heard horror stories. It sounds like you are forced to live in conditions that are even worse than college dorm life, if that’s possible. Then, there is the uncertainty of being able to make it from regionals to majors – they might not be hiring when you become qualified…it is competitive and you may just not get picked…Then there’s the fact that the industry puts seniority before experience. If your airline goes under or you just don’t like it there, you could be forced to start at the bottom at a new airline. Is this all true?
And yet, when I look at the “What’s your dream job” thread on this forum, everyone that posts says their dream job has something to do with flying. There is no shortage of people pursuing pilot careers – that’s why it is so competitive.
Pilots: Why do you put up with this? Is it because flying is your first and only love? What makes a pilot career so attractive in spite of all the negatives? At this point, I am having a hard time understanding why anyone would want to be a pilot….and yet I haven’t been able to scratch “pilot” off my list of potential careers.
It would seem that there is more luck to making decent money (>$50k/year) as a pilot than skill. What do you think?
Another concern I have about flying for a living is air quality. Studies have shown that the air quality at and surrounding an airport is worse than that seen at industrial areas. That’s pretty bad. The indoor air quality inside a plane is also questionable to me – at least as a passenger, I don’t think it is very good. What are your thoughts on this?
Most of the information I’ve found about being a pilot is in reference to commercial aviation. I think it would be pretty cool to fly teams of scientists to very remote locations that the general public do not get to go to. Who gets those jobs? I also noticed the USDA hires pilots. What for (other than fighting fires)? Could you be a pilot for park rangers or something? What about corporate piloting for non profits like The Nature Conservancy? Or how about helicopter flying for the Coast Guard? Where can I find info about the pros and cons of these routes? How competitive are these jobs, how much do they pay?
Has anyone ever gone abroad (to say somewhere in Africa) to do their pilot training (presuming that it is cheaper in other countries) then came back to the states to secure a job?
Finally, what drew you to airplanes vs helicopters, or vice versa?