RightSeatGirl
KA'PLAH BITCHES!
Instead of continuing to pollute a Job Listing thread I wanted to discuss the mentality of this thought process..
The debate is basically about companies requiring "jet" time to be considered for employment.
From that thread:
This is logic-less thinking and what I term "jet-snobbery". (Not directed at you Dugie just that thought process). Flying a Jet is different because a Jet is a different type of aircraft with a different set of limitations, systems and performance numbers. Not because it's the frakin "Space Shuttle!" Once a pilot get's over his/her first thousand hours or two power-plant becomes irrelevant and just a new set of numbers to memorize. Jets are NOT harder to fly. They have their own characteristics certainly, but flying faster and higher just means one needs to consider a few things differently than flying something with props. A pilot would be no more or less safe transitioning from a jet to a turboprop vs the normal direction. And again, at that level it's just new numbers.
For example, take a guy that has flown nothing but 747's for the last 10 years and sit him down in the right seat of some oddball single engine piston type like say a Commander 114B..Do you think just because he has JET time that this studly god of a pilot will instantaneously master the specific characteristics of that type of aircraft the moment he starts the engine? For that matter going from a 747 down to a Straight wing Citation would be no easier for him. He would still need training to be safe and competent on the type. Jet time does not make a pilot more skilled or safer. It just means they have experience burning more gas and making more noise and have been exposed to more rads than us lowly low altitude slimes.
I understand someone wanting jet experience as a min, but as I said in that thread a mere 250 jet is pointless insofar as someone who has that little jet time. That's not enough time in TYPE let alone powerplant to really say that is a worthwhile min for a job. And a pilot with 5 or 6 years TP 121 experience but no jet time will be no more or less able to handle moving into a jet. In fact, I'll venture to say a twelve hundred hour pilot with a scant 250 TJ would be woefully underskilled compared to a year 5 or 6 regional TP slave..
The debate is basically about companies requiring "jet" time to be considered for employment.
From that thread:
For someplace moving to a midsize jet someone with jet experience is prudent.
This is logic-less thinking and what I term "jet-snobbery". (Not directed at you Dugie just that thought process). Flying a Jet is different because a Jet is a different type of aircraft with a different set of limitations, systems and performance numbers. Not because it's the frakin "Space Shuttle!" Once a pilot get's over his/her first thousand hours or two power-plant becomes irrelevant and just a new set of numbers to memorize. Jets are NOT harder to fly. They have their own characteristics certainly, but flying faster and higher just means one needs to consider a few things differently than flying something with props. A pilot would be no more or less safe transitioning from a jet to a turboprop vs the normal direction. And again, at that level it's just new numbers.
For example, take a guy that has flown nothing but 747's for the last 10 years and sit him down in the right seat of some oddball single engine piston type like say a Commander 114B..Do you think just because he has JET time that this studly god of a pilot will instantaneously master the specific characteristics of that type of aircraft the moment he starts the engine? For that matter going from a 747 down to a Straight wing Citation would be no easier for him. He would still need training to be safe and competent on the type. Jet time does not make a pilot more skilled or safer. It just means they have experience burning more gas and making more noise and have been exposed to more rads than us lowly low altitude slimes.
I understand someone wanting jet experience as a min, but as I said in that thread a mere 250 jet is pointless insofar as someone who has that little jet time. That's not enough time in TYPE let alone powerplant to really say that is a worthwhile min for a job. And a pilot with 5 or 6 years TP 121 experience but no jet time will be no more or less able to handle moving into a jet. In fact, I'll venture to say a twelve hundred hour pilot with a scant 250 TJ would be woefully underskilled compared to a year 5 or 6 regional TP slave..