As a 30 year old career changer about to start CFI training this is the thing I'm worried most about. My wife and I have been married almost 5 years and I'm afraid she is used to me being around now and that down the road it will be a shock.
I have found the pilots who complain about how crappy the job is are usually very miserable people to be around. My guess is that this is another troll attempt by the OP.
I just wish people knew what they were getting into with this career and that it might not be the best for relationships, marriages,....I've known plenty of awesome guys and pilots that went through at least one bad divorce...
Air in the tires, no tow bar, we've got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark out, and we're wearing sunglasses.30/70 rule. Captains will do the walk around 30% of the time when the weather is over 70 degrees and sunny!
Air in the tires, no tow bar, we've got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark out, and we're wearing sunglasses.
Bad captain - and most importantly let me make fun of you for wearing the hat when it's not required.
Lol, look at your hat.
I divorced prior to starting my airline career and remarried after I retired. With such a target rich environment, I was pretty content in between.![]()
My solution to this guy:
I am under no obligation to babysit Mr. GrumpyPants.
Me too. I've noticed over the years that most of the time, both of us will do a walk around, regardless of who's flying as CA or FO. Just seems to make sense and provide redundancy. Then again, I fly aircraft a wee tad smaller than the big iron at the airlines which makes a typical walk-around much more, er, "productive". I'm not in any way suggesting that a walk around is ever a bad thing, but without binoculars and a ladder it would seem the stuff you'd be looking for on a hike around, say, a 777 would have to be rather macro to even notice it. I mean, I get checking for tire damage, missing elevators, open hatches, or baggage carts in the intakes, but it's not like you can check fuel, touch-test pitot tubes, look for castle nut pins, etc. on that kind of ship. Or is it?It's funny, as the PC, I always do a walk around*.
*except medevac... get in and go!
Best Plan Ever!I divorced prior to starting my airline career and remarried after I retired. With such a target rich environment, I was pretty content in between.![]()
Amen. Unfortunately, osmosis occurrs in the cockpit. It's tough enough flying with a bad attitude let alone one that wants to hang out afterward. It's been a learning curve polishing the slam click excuses.
Told one guy I was going to take a nap. Saw him in the deli down the street an hour later.
@Crop Duster
Slightly different circumstances. I'm wearing a military hat now. As the "captain" I never ask my crew to do something I wouldn't do myself.
My asterisk was also military related. I'm currently the guy that scoops up seriously hurt guys off the battlefield.
We don't do walk-arounds when seconds count during the golden hour.
When I'm a nasty civilian bus driver, I'm always happy to do a walk around. I'm pleasantly surprised that at my current cheap ass airline, many of the captains do the walk around.*
*I'm also senior to 5 prior captains I flew with from my Ejet days...
I'm happy in a group, happy completely alone!
I think my last three months on the 330, I spent 90% of my layovers alone because I just didn't want to sit around in a drum circle in an Irish bar and bitch about the merger or play "lawyer ball" with procedural changes. I simply wanted some good food, some quality beer and to have a little micro-vacation.
I do the same on the baby bus.