SpiceWeasel
Tre Kronor
Worrying about it... Not so much.Of course.
But I actively worry about keeping my employment and qualification anyway. Thinking about remaining qualified should be a part of every "professional's" thought process.
Worrying about it... Not so much.Of course.
But I actively worry about keeping my employment and qualification anyway. Thinking about remaining qualified should be a part of every "professional's" thought process.
Worry was the wrong word, but you get the point.Worrying about it... Not so much.
.. so what exactly don't you agree with? The seniority system? Or age requirements for a certificate?
No, I'm 24, with an ATP, and not interested in working for the airlines - doesn't even effect me at the moment - that said, I don't think there should be any legal requirement other than experience. Just because you were born a few years prior to another guy doesn't mean you're inherently more qualified - which is what this law says. And realistically, while I think if you're flying a "big plane" passed 65 you've probably not made the best life choices - I have to concede that that's a somewhat arbitrary line as well.
I agree with you. I am against arbitrary standards for age, period. Instead, we should be doing cognitive testing to determine ability and judgment along the entire range. I think that age 18 is a logical base number, as under that the person is a child, but there should be no upper limit, just determine everything from 18 onward based on a REAL physical that includes a real cognitive and neurological exam on a regular basis (which could reasonably increase in frequency past age 60). Some people would be mature enough and have enough SA to pass it all at age 18 (many likely would not) and some people might be good to fly in their 80s (but the vast majority would not). The only arbitrary line would be age 18, and I am not sure I could argue that even that one is justified if we can test maturity levels through brain scans and cognitive testing (which we pretty much can).
Age requirements for above 18 for the ATP. A CDL is 18 in most states, a Drivers license is 16 (17 is close enough for a private), why is the ATP 5 years after when in the rest the world it's 21?
You could fly a cargo 1900/ EMB-110/EMB-120/BE99 or any other one of these airplanes perfectly safely with a commercial carrying cargo. These were all regional airplanes with people in the back before, who says that you're unqualified to fly the exact same 1900 at Lakes or Silver, or any other company for that matter at age 18 to 23?
It doesn't seem like age plays much of a factor at all in aircraft crashes. Does anybody have data on that?
But what would the insurance carrier say?
Well, you could look at private pilots and break it down by: number of crashes per 100,000 flight hours by those under 25 and those over 25. It might give you a good idea of whether older age actually makes one a better aeronautical decision maker.
Well, you could look at private pilots and break it down by: number of crashes per 100,000 flight hours by those under 25 and those over 25. It might give you a good idea of whether older age actually makes one a better aeronautical decision maker.
I'm willing to bet that there are many more pilots over the age of 25 than under, thus skewing the numbers because those over 25 will operate a much larger number of legs for whatever sample size you choose. My guess is that the results would be that those over 25 account for a huge number of crashes per year simply because there are more of them.
But what would the insurance carrier say?
You misunderstood the post. If you take a 100,000 hours flown by people under 25, and compare it to 100,000 hours by people over 25, which group had more crashes per 100,000 flight hours? That gets rid of the variable of how many hours each group is flying.
I found it particularly amusing when I was delivering a brand new 450,000 dollar Saratoga... then went to the car rental place and was denied the ability to rent it because I was 20.
I get that. But who has 100,000 hours in anything unless they're flying really long flights?
You'd have equipment changes. License changes. Things change. How do you adapt?
Sophistry. Economic and industry factors likely put much older pilots in fatal crashes simply because younger pilots didn't have an avenue.
I don't think that deception is the goal of asking about age factors in accidents. Looking at accident rates by age seems like it would be very relevant in determining the effectiveness of ATP age limits.
Isn't the idea that you take the entire 121 pilot population under 25 and see how many accidents they're involved in per 100,000 hrs of flight time vs. the 121 population over 25? This is how accident stats have been taken in aviation for as long as I've been around.