melltimejr
That's what she said
Like many of us on here, I'm currently at a regional and hoping to get the call up to the big leagues sooner rather than later. I've really began to turn up the heat on advocating for myself in terms of networking, going to job fairs, going through my apps with a fine tooth comb, volunteering, etc. There seems to be a general consensus out there that the best advice is to more or less do the above things that I mentioned and you will get a call...eventually.
One dilemma that has presented itself at my current airline is the opportunity to become an instructor pilot. Now, having attended hiring seminars, I know that being in the training department checks off one very large, competitive check box. However, I have also gotten the impression that "training department" really means "line check airman" or at least the preference is very skewed in that direction. Check airman positions are very competitive here, where instructor positions seem more easily obtainable.
So, my question, would it be a smart move to sacrifice flight time for an instructor position? At my current shop being an instructor more or less means that I'd never fly. The training department is swamped and the instructors who are also line pilots basically only do enough flying to stay current. Pertaining to basically not flying, I know that places like Delta only have a 1,500 hour requirement with no PIC requirement, but realistically, I don't think many, if any, 1500 hour guys are getting a call.
As it applies to me, I'm currently at about 300 PIC and 3,000TT. My thought was to get to 1,000 PIC (I know 1,000 isn't the benchmark that it used to be, but it does still seem to be a threshold) and then look into being an instructor pilot if I still haven't gotten a call. The additional 700 PIC that I'd need to accumulate though would take about a year, and a year is a long time in this hiring environment, especially if checking off the training department box, albeit not as a check airman, would warrant a call much sooner.
So what say you? Fly the line? Try to get a sim instructor position? Hold out for check airman? Thanks for the feedback...
One dilemma that has presented itself at my current airline is the opportunity to become an instructor pilot. Now, having attended hiring seminars, I know that being in the training department checks off one very large, competitive check box. However, I have also gotten the impression that "training department" really means "line check airman" or at least the preference is very skewed in that direction. Check airman positions are very competitive here, where instructor positions seem more easily obtainable.
So, my question, would it be a smart move to sacrifice flight time for an instructor position? At my current shop being an instructor more or less means that I'd never fly. The training department is swamped and the instructors who are also line pilots basically only do enough flying to stay current. Pertaining to basically not flying, I know that places like Delta only have a 1,500 hour requirement with no PIC requirement, but realistically, I don't think many, if any, 1500 hour guys are getting a call.
As it applies to me, I'm currently at about 300 PIC and 3,000TT. My thought was to get to 1,000 PIC (I know 1,000 isn't the benchmark that it used to be, but it does still seem to be a threshold) and then look into being an instructor pilot if I still haven't gotten a call. The additional 700 PIC that I'd need to accumulate though would take about a year, and a year is a long time in this hiring environment, especially if checking off the training department box, albeit not as a check airman, would warrant a call much sooner.
So what say you? Fly the line? Try to get a sim instructor position? Hold out for check airman? Thanks for the feedback...