Ameriflight hiring for First Officer program

How was your phone interview experience? Any info on that would be greatly appreciated!
From the previous page of this thread my experience was very similar

Just finished the phone interview which was about 1hr long. Started out with information I had on my resume, flight times in the last 90 days, 12 months, my last instrument flight etc. Then asked about my medical, and mentioned it needed to be a 2nd class or better (I'm exercising 3rd class privileges). Asked me about any time where I had to declare an emergency. Told him about some scenarios where I was under pressure, nothing really big. He asked me what I liked, and disliked about my current position (CFI). Then asked why I wanted to work at Ameriflight, and where I saw myself in 10 years. We went on to a few technical questions.
Tell me about the engine on one of the aircraft you fly?
How does a piston work?
How does a turbine engine work?
What are IFR alternate airport requirements?
What do red runway center-lines mean?
When can you descend below minimums?
What are you required to report when entering a hold?
Questions on MEL
If you are at 10,000, how far our do you need to descend to reach 1000ft?
If I'm departing from Dallas to the north, and there's a thunderstorm ahead, which direction to deviate around it?
If I get structural icing what do I do?
If my static port gets blocked, what instruments are affected?
How do the 4 forces act on a plane in S&L flt?
Part 135 Ops
Pretty straight forward, nothing tricky. He said the next step would be to schedule an in-person screening, do some background checks, and granted that works well I'll get a call for a class in June. Bases he said are determined by candidate response. First to respond (to phone calls) for classes get first dibs. Currently looking for Metro and Emb-120 FO's. May classes are full and there is a big need for 135 Captains.
 
Apparently there is a long list of prospective FO's getting called for classes based on place in line from time of interview. In the mean time they ask you to update your hours regurlarly. Captain positions are what they mostly fill.
 
Does anyone know if you fill an application on their website if that database is exclusively for that position for that base? They have a ton of openings in the EMB120 or the SA227 as FO's. Almost all with the same mins. Must I fill each one out seperately or will one suffice?
 
Had an interview with them! Took around 1 hour and 10 minutes. The interview went well and was pretty spot on with a previous post on this thread made from Avensa727:

Just finished the phone interview which was about 1hr long. Started out with information I had on my resume, flight times in the last 90 days, 12 months, my last instrument flight etc. Then asked about my medical, and mentioned it needed to be a 2nd class or better (I'm exercising 3rd class privileges). Asked me about any time where I had to declare an emergency. Told him about some scenarios where I was under pressure, nothing really big. He asked me what I liked, and disliked about my current position (CFI). Then asked why I wanted to work at Ameriflight, and where I saw myself in 10 years. We went on to a few technical questions.
Tell me about the engine on one of the aircraft you fly?
How does a piston work?
How does a turbine engine work?
What are IFR alternate airport requirements?
What do red runway center-lines mean?
When can you descend below minimums?
What are you required to report when entering a hold?
- Adding: Holding speeds and altitudes?
Questions about a MEL, if you have a item that is or is not on the MEL, what do you do?
If you are at 10,000, how far our do you need to descend to reach 1000ft?
If I'm departing from Dallas to the north, and there's a thunderstorm ahead, which direction to deviate around it?
If I get structural icing what do I do?
If my static port gets blocked, what instruments are affected?
How do the 4 forces act on a plane in S&L flt?
Part 135 Ops
Pretty straight forward, nothing tricky. He said the next step would be to schedule an in-person screening, do some background checks, and granted that works well I'll get a call for a class in June. Bases he said are determined by candidate response. First to respond (to phone calls) for classes get first dibs. Currently looking for Metro and Emb-120 FO's. May classes are full and there is a big need for 135 Captains.
 
I called them last week he said he would call back at 10 AM the next day to set up a phone interview. He never did call me I left a couple of messages....:tinfoil:
 
I called them last week he said he would call back at 10 AM the next day to set up a phone interview. He never did call me I left a couple of messages....:tinfoil:

If they don't want you, give it up & move on to another company. Plenty of quality flying gigs hiring this day & age. Its a pilots market! Go where you yoke with. Work for a company that looks at your resume & wants you.

Just my advice & opinion.
 
I called them last week he said he would call back at 10 AM the next day to set up a phone interview. He never did call me I left a couple of messages....:tinfoil:

If you want it just flood their voicemail. Nothing looks better than a persistent person.

On a side note, how long does it take for them to answer back with results from the interview? It's been a week already.
 
If they don't want you, give it up & move on to another company. Plenty of quality flying gigs hiring this day & age. Its a pilots market! Go where you yoke with. Work for a company that looks at your resume & wants you.

Just my advice & opinion.

Hard to say maybe the guy I am calling is not great at his job. Maybe the holiday weekend or as you said maybe not interested
 
Hard to say maybe the guy I am calling is not great at his job. Maybe the holiday weekend or as you said maybe not interested

I hear you. It's great to be persistent. Glad to hear you are. I hope and pray things go your way soon and quickly. But from what I hear AMF needs pilots really bad! So I can't understand them taking their time. Recruiters 1 task is to fill classes with qualified individuals as quickly as possible.
 
I hear you. It's great to be persistent. Glad to hear you are. I hope and pray things go your way soon and quickly. But from what I hear AMF needs pilots really bad! So I can't understand them taking their time. Recruiters 1 task is to fill classes with qualified individuals as quickly as possible.
Yeah or just say thanks don't call us we'll call you :tinfoil:
 
Applied Tuesday night and got called back to schedule the interview yesterday morning. Haven't had a chance to speak with the recruiter again but is anyone on here currently flying EM120 or B99 ? Curious if they have updated the flight decks from the " 70's technology " ie little GPS and no a/p in most of the fleet...
 
Yeah or just say thanks don't call us we'll call you :tinfoil:

Exactly.... But now your being overly reasonable & asking way to much of the company.

On a positive note. They might be keeping your resume for future consideration.

I WISH companies gave feeback to prospects on where they stand. Or if not chosen, what they can do to increase their chances within the next 4-6 months and reapply.

A company doing this would go a long way for a positive reputation vs a poor one. Its a small industry.
 
Applied Tuesday night and got called back to schedule the interview yesterday morning. Haven't had a chance to speak with the recruiter again but is anyone on here currently flying EM120 or B99 ? Curious if they have updated the flight decks from the " 70's technology " ie little GPS and no a/p in most of the fleet...

Have you heard back from them? Have you interviewed?
 
Exactly.... But now your being overly reasonable & asking way to much of the company.

On a positive note. They might be keeping your resume for future consideration.

I WISH companies gave feedback to prospects on where they stand. Or if not chosen, what they can do to increase their chances within the next 4-6 months and reapply.

A company doing this would go a long way for a positive reputation vs a poor one. Its a small industry.

Yes that is what they emailed me to update my hours monthly and that they are keeping my application on file so we shall see if anything changes....
 
Applied Tuesday night and got called back to schedule the interview yesterday morning. Haven't had a chance to speak with the recruiter again but is anyone on here currently flying EM120 or B99 ? Curious if they have updated the flight decks from the " 70's technology " ie little GPS and no a/p in most of the fleet...
I fly the 99. Some have the GTN650 or 750 while others have no GPS in my base 3 have GPS and 2 don't. By 2020, they'll all have to have GPS to comply with the ADS-B mandate. As for autopilot...pretty rare on the 99, but very common in the PA31 , which I also fly (but GPS is pretty rare in the PA31).
 
Don't feel bad @Pilotlynn I'm in the same boat. I called and told them I am about 50 hours short of the min could I be an FO for a bit? Says he doesn't want to waste the money only to have me pop over to left seat 2 or 3 months later. Recruiter tells me go get a job doing flight instruction for 50 hours.

I explained that I had other offers (some that were local) but all required a year long commitment. I told the recruiter Ameriflight was my first choice but I am not going to dump 6-8K on punching holes in the sky just for a chance to interview. So its now or a year or more from now. If they want me we need to find a way to make this work.

Then says maybe they can bring me on as a VFR capt. Says lets do a interview. Pass the interview and he says let me talk with management and he will call me back. Then I get a form email asking me to update my times and contact me when I have the mins. Guess I am going to take one of the other options.

@ScorpionStinger I was in IT in the early 90s and 2000s. I recall when companies were offering me a brand new car if I would come work for them to do Y2K bug fixes. We are going to see the same thing over the next few years in aviation. These companies need to get on the ball with recruiting and think outside the box beyond what they have always done or they wont have enough pilots to stay in business.
 
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