There has been quite a few people getting hired by Pinnacle with less than 300 TT but only if your training was 141.
Wow, that really gives you the warm and fuzzies about flying on them.
Once again, read what I said above. That doesn't exist anymore.
Well thanks to the people that actually had some helpful input. The reason I am looking for something else besides CFI is because I have failed my CFI ride twice now and I really don't want to take the chance of having 3 fails on my record. I failed the oral at the very end during my explanation on aerodynamics. I came back to see him the second time and he said congrats you passed the oral awesome job, but we cant fly because someone let the plane roll back into another plane and damaged the tail section. 2 weeks later I go back and pre-flight the plane and am ready to go. We were filling out the paper work and he said he would like me to do a w/b. No big deal I thought. Well I did the weight and balance with the charts in the Cessna POH and he said that was fine, but what was the formula to do it without the charts. Well unfortunately I was never taught this method and if I was I dont recall it, so he failed me again. He said that fails cannot be accessed by airlines and it was up to me to inform them of my fails, but from what I read online that looks to be false. Either way I am not sure and just want to find another way to get to 500 hours if its possible. Thanks again for the help.
As far as Traffic Watch goes, I don't know about Ohio, but here in the Bay Area its 500TT for insurance reasons.
Or pay the DPE an extra $400 and pass with flying colors!If you are that worried about busting another one, pay a DPE to prep you for the next one.
well either way you will have to explain the failures so its better to have gotten the CFI then then to have given up on it. Which would you rather hire someone who failed a few times but eventually got his CFI or someone who gave up? I know how I would hire. And its not the person who gave up, it just shows your cant deal with life/failure.
well either way you will have to explain the failures so its better to have gotten the CFI then then to have given up on it. Which would you rather hire someone who failed a few times but eventually got his CFI or someone who gave up? I know how I would hire. And its not the person who gave up, it just shows your cant deal with life/failure.
Not sure I would say that getting a CFI is the pinnacle of aviation achievements. That's a pretty expensive ride to fail. There's nothing wrong with waiting to get a CFI until you have more experience under your belt. If I were interviewing someone who scratched and clawed their way through a commercial and bachelor's degree by working two jobs... and decided to fly jumpers instead of continuing with a CFI, I'm not sure I'd hold that against them.
If you're just CFI for the sole purpose of hours for the magic light number for regionals but have no passion or desire to do it I dont consider that a true CFI. God I hated that...
Now that everyone has had their input on why or why I shouldn't become a CFI, can someone maybe try and provide information on the reason I posted this thread? Does anyone have any input on NON CFI JOBS.
-Brian
ps. I want to finish my CFI, and will, but in the mean while I wouldn't mind having options. Thanks.
