The answer is "it depends on the situation". What the family life is like, what the full time job is, and what the training requirements are.
I know people whose life revolves around aviation but they hold down a "real" job for the money. I also have a good friend who let his aviation hobby and time away from the family become a major factor that lead to a divorce. It is a balancing act, but each situation is unique. However, whatever you do, be very sensitive to what it takes away from the family.
I drive a tractor trailer on. weekdays. Weekends I cfi.
@pilot1288. Sometimes you need a break and kind of just relax. We all have that aviation quench but my advice is try not to go crazy over wanting hours and doing 8 hour days. Few hours on the weekend is good enough. I found myself getting burnt out after a while working a regular job and than trying to fly for 8 hours.
It depends on your goal. For me as of now I have no immediate plans on going to the airlines so I am just taking it easy and enjoying my time. Unless, if I happen to find a flying job that's pays as much as I am making now I may jump ship.The regular job is too good to leave, but I need something to quench the desire to become a full-time professional pilot. Was wondering if a part time (4-5 hours/week) CFI gig was enough to keep you guys happy while advancing your non-flying careers.
That sounds like a perfect scenario for someone who has a non-aviation primary career. How many hours do you teach per week?I have always instructed part time with a "real job" for money and benefits. When I first started teaching I was pretty active, was renting out my own plane, and was instructing 5-6 days per week after work and on the weekends. It was fun for a while but that got old after a couple years and I realized I was sacrificing too much time with my kids. So, I sold my plane and now I just keep a couple owner-students on and its just enough to keep me satisfied. It's obviously a terrible way to build time if you're chasing shiny jet dreams. For me, it's perfect for this stage in my life as I get my flight fix, I stay interested and motivated to serve the students, it provides walking around cash, and I still have lots of free time to spend with my kids and do other hobbies.
What kinds are part-time 135 gigs are there that can accommodate non-aviation primary careers? Air ambulance? Weekend freight? Thanks.I've quite enjoyed being a CFI on the weekends. I'd like to think I deliver better instruction because I value delivering a quality lesson over smashing in the hours.
It's even built into a part-time 135 gig for me in SR-22s.