typhoonpilot
Well-Known Member
But not to PTS standards. An interview sim evaluation is basically a checkride in a plane you've never flown before. Who do you know can pass a checkride in a plane they've never flown before?
Bob Hoover for one
TP
But not to PTS standards. An interview sim evaluation is basically a checkride in a plane you've never flown before. Who do you know can pass a checkride in a plane they've never flown before?
@scooter2525 is another.Bob Hoover for one
TP
Give me a Mustang to fly, and I'll go up in a damn hurricane.If you had the opportunity to fly a new airframe, for instance lets say P51 Mustang (I assume you have never flown that type). Would you want your maiden flight in that plane to be solo hard IMC? I sure wouldn't. I'd want my first flight to be at least with another experienced person on board and also in VMC. Once I have the hand of that plane would I want to attempt hard IMC. Even the most grizzled pilot would do it this way. Why does this company want to know how well I handle what boils down to a suicide mission? I'm not OK with this.
Nothing in terms of specific numbers or technical knowledge of the AStar is asked of the applicants, only things related to helicopter ops in general: helo aerodynamics, operations, regulations, etc.
Then if the applicant asks for the power setting needed for straight and level flight, the interviewer should say what it is. Thats the part that I think went wrong during my Airnet interview. If the interviewer had just told me what the power setting was, the flight would have gone much smoothly. Since I had to use trial+error to figure out the power setting on my own, I got behind the airplane, which snowballs into being way behind. Thats not how I normally fly. Usually I'm ahead of the airplane and I fly perfect. Its not like I was asking questions like "whats a FAF?" or "What does this number on the approach plate mean". All my questions were specific to the frasca model I was in that was completely reasonable for me not to know. If the interviewer takes the role of helpful instructor during the evaluation, then the flight can represent something real (a first flight in an unfamiliar airframe). Once the interviewer establishes "i'm not here", then the evaluation stope being realistic because I would never solo fly an unfamiliar airplane.
There must be an FAA examiner out there wishing for a do over after reading this.Then if the applicant asks for the power setting needed for straight and level flight, the interviewer should say what it is. Thats the part that I think went wrong during my Airnet interview. If the interviewer had just told me what the power setting was, the flight would have gone much smoothly. Since I had to use trial+error to figure out the power setting on my own, I got behind the airplane, which snowballs into being way behind. Thats not how I normally fly. Usually I'm ahead of the airplane and I fly perfect. Its not like I was asking questions like "whats a FAF?" or "What does this number on the approach plate mean". All my questions were specific to the frasca model I was in that was completely reasonable for me not to know. If the interviewer takes the role of helpful instructor during the evaluation, then the flight can represent something real (a first flight in an unfamiliar airframe). Once the interviewer establishes "i'm not here", then the evaluation stope being realistic because I would never solo fly an unfamiliar airplane.
Then if the applicant asks for the power setting needed for straight and level flight, the interviewer should say what it is. Thats the part that I think went wrong during my Airnet interview. If the interviewer had just told me what the power setting was, the flight would have gone much smoothly. Since I had to use trial+error to figure out the power setting on my own, I got behind the airplane, which snowballs into being way behind. Thats not how I normally fly. Usually I'm ahead of the airplane and I fly perfect. Its not like I was asking questions like "whats a FAF?" or "What does this number on the approach plate mean". All my questions were specific to the frasca model I was in that was completely reasonable for me not to know. If the interviewer takes the role of helpful instructor during the evaluation, then the flight can represent something real (a first flight in an unfamiliar airframe). Once the interviewer establishes "i'm not here", then the evaluation stope being realistic because I would never solo fly an unfamiliar airplane.
Who's hoarding the popcorn? Pass it this way please...
Then if the applicant asks for the power setting needed for straight and level flight, the interviewer should say what it is. Thats the part that I think went wrong during my Airnet interview. If the interviewer had just told me what the power setting was, the flight would have gone much smoothly. Since I had to use trial+error to figure out the power setting on my own,
Then if the applicant asks for the power setting needed for straight and level flight, the interviewer should say what it is. Thats the part that I think went wrong during my Airnet interview. If the interviewer had just told me what the power setting was, the flight would have gone much smoothly. Since I had to use trial+error to figure out the power setting on my own, I got behind the airplane, which snowballs into being way behind. Thats not how I normally fly. Usually I'm ahead of the airplane and I fly perfect. Its not like I was asking questions like "whats a FAF?" or "What does this number on the approach plate mean". All my questions were specific to the frasca model I was in that was completely reasonable for me not to know. If the interviewer takes the role of helpful instructor during the evaluation, then the flight can represent something real (a first flight in an unfamiliar airframe). Once the interviewer establishes "i'm not here", then the evaluation stope being realistic because I would never solo fly an unfamiliar airplane.
My first 121 interview had a sim eval in a BE-1900. I had never flown anything like it before, nothing remotely close to it. Nothing went well. Apparently my seat wasn't positioned properly so, when I advanced the power levers on the takeoff, my seat slid back and I couldn't reach the rudder pedals very well any longer. So right from the word GO, I was already scrambling to keep it together. Once in the air, I got caught up and did a decent job and the air work was alright. Then, came the ILS to a full stop. ILS went fine, the landing went...well let's just say we all died when we land..'er crashed, with the red-screen-of-death. So that wasn't my finest hour in a sim, to say the least.
But, I got the job. I had never failed a check ride prior to that event and I've never failed one since. So, sim evals aren't about perfect performance, it's about learning and adapting to adversity.
I was surprised at the number of people who tanked the sim portions at my interviews at ENY and XJT.My first 121 interview had a sim eval in a BE-1900. I had never flown anything like it before, nothing remotely close to it. Nothing went well. Apparently my seat wasn't positioned properly so, when I advanced the power levers on the takeoff, my seat slid back and I couldn't reach the rudder pedals very well any longer. So right from the word GO, I was already scrambling to keep it together. Once in the air, I got caught up and did a decent job and the air work was alright. Then, came the ILS to a full stop. ILS went fine, the landing went...well let's just say we all died when we land..'er crashed, with the red-screen-of-death. So that wasn't my finest hour in a sim, to say the least.
But, I got the job. I had never failed a check ride prior to that event and I've never failed one since. So, sim evals aren't about perfect performance, it's about learning and adapting to adversity.
I was surprised at the number of people who tanked the sim portions at my interviews at ENY and XJT.
SKW didn't ask me for one at the time because I was current 121, and it was assumed I could fly.