Yo ATN_Pilot

derg

Apparently a "terse" writer
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Yo @ATN_Pilot, yo girl look real good in that dress we bought for her. :)

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I was just talking to somebody about those planes. Did Delta buy them? For some reason I thought they were leased from Southwest.
 
Do the 717 pilots get any kind of a flow through to mainline Delta once they get enough hours? I kid! When I flew the 190 for jetblue, we had a DL Capt ask us if we had a flow to the real jetblue.
The ER capt on my commute home the other day thought the angry puppy was a CRJ.....
 
The ER capt on my commute home the other day thought the angry puppy was a CRJ.....

Generally you don't see folks that clueless, although at NorthernJets once I had a guy argue with me about furloughs. He was absolute in his conviction that we didn't have guys on furlough (it was almost 900 at the time). Argument used? "My buddy in management would have told me".

That being said, there are an astonishing number of guys and gals who: Bid their line, do no schedule adjustments, materialize at work at the required time, fly their trip and go home, with zero interaction with the Company, ALPA or any other intermediary. They don't read anything ALPA puts out, and read the bare minimum from the company that is required. Essentially everything they know outside of operating the aircraft comes from rumors from folks they fly with. During Contract time, they flip to the page with the pay rates and that's it.

And that's absolutely 100% OK.

But like going to someplace where they don't speak English and making fun of the English they don't speak there, it can be a tenuous situation when something "for reals" pops up.

EDIT: Oh, yea...love the airplane. Everything about it is awesome, including the number of people senior to me who don't bid it.
 
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EDIT: Oh, yea...love the airplane. Everything about it is awesome, including the number of people senior to me who don't bid it.
Yea he was a nice guy but pretty clueless. When I told him it was a 717 his reply was “oh man I feel dumb....thought it looked a little big for a CRJ...”

Yea I’m really considering bidding it when my seat lock is up. Pretty cool lil plane and bonus is it’s only a week or so training coming from the 88....
 
Yea he was a nice guy but pretty clueless. When I told him it was a 717 his reply was “oh man I feel dumb....thought it looked a little big for a CRJ...”

Yea I’m really considering bidding it when my seat lock is up. Pretty cool lil plane and bonus is it’s only a week or so training coming from the 88....

I recommend it. No hassle. Flies like a DC-9-30 with none of the drama and none of the sweating. Fully Richman approved.
 
I recommend it. No hassle. Flies like a DC-9-30 with none of the drama and none of the sweating. Fully Richman approved.

Out of the three 121 jets I've flown, it was by far the most fun. Some strange as he'll quirks, but it's handling and ability to fall out of the sky on command made it worth it. I'm happy to be moving on to other types, but I'm glad I got to fly it.
 
Generally you don't see folks that clueless, although at NorthernJets once I had a guy argue with me about furloughs. He was absolute in his conviction that we didn't have guys on furlough (it was almost 900 at the time). Argument used? "My buddy in management would have told me".

That being said, there are an astonishing number of guys and gals who: Bid their line, do no schedule adjustments, materialize at work at the required time, fly their trip and go home, with zero interaction with the Company, ALPA or any other intermediary. They don't read anything ALPA puts out, and read the bare minimum from the company that is required. Essentially everything they know outside of operating the aircraft comes from rumors from folks they fly with. During Contract time, they flip to the page with the pay rates and that's it.

And that's absolutely 100% OK.

But like going to someplace where they don't speak English and making fun of the English they don't speak there, it can be a tenuous situation when something "for reals" pops up.

EDIT: Oh, yea...love the airplane. Everything about it is awesome, including the number of people senior to me who don't bid it.

This is true.

The only thing that drives me nuts are the captains who haven't learned the new procedures or the Surface features. 90% of the time, I'll downloaded an electronic flight plan, populate FDP and FlightWeatherViewer with the weather data and my copilots sit there watching and say stuff like "What…the HELL… is that?! I've never seen another person use any of that."

But it comes in handy because most guys senior to me have no clue how to effectively bid or use CSI (Continuous Schedule Improvement) their schedules. :)
 
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