2004 v. 2006 for pilots

While you weren't talking to me, keep in mind unions have artificially raised the pay for many jobs. At the risk of getting flamed I would even venture to say piloting would be one of them. Keep in mind I didn't say this is bad; just they've raised the pay. Maybe the correction you saw post-911 was coming?

Electricians also have a union, if I remember correctly, which has raised the value of their pay, and they get paid fairly well. The more effective the union (ie the UAW) the higher their pay is out of whack with similar jobs.

You hit the nail on the head. I think early on a precedence was set for high pay, and it's continued throughout the last 70-80 years. There's no such thing as "overpaid" or "underpaid" there's just "paid".
 
You guys have got to actually look at what I'm saying and parse it out:

-Flying, in and of itself, is VERY dangerous

-The only reason why the ACCIDENT RATE (which I don't think we can equate to danger level) is so low is because of all the highly trained professionals that we have working in this industry.

Or to put it another way, I'd love to see somebody argue that nuclear weapons are perfectly safe; their record shows such. With how many nuclear weapons that have been produced, only a few hundred thousand people have actually died because of them. The sheer fact that such a weapon can bring MASSIVE amounts of devistation is the measure of it's danger level. Maybe I'm a pessemist, but I look at things in terms of going wrong instead of going as planned.

Hence, I measure danger (at least in my line of work) by how many things CAN go wrong, the chances of which are increased the more you do it.

Statistically, flying is very safe. I think Jtrain, and other's points, were that it is the pilots that make it safe. There are, however, certainly plenty of jobs that are just as dangerous, or arguably, more dangerous than flying an airplane.
I agree! :)
 
I will point your attention to this article to dispute the lack of danger.

http://money.cnn.com/2006/08/16/pf/2005_most_dangerous_jobs/index.htm

That's flying and pilots in general - we're talking about Part 121 passenger flying - the pilots are as safe as the passengers are, and that's pretty safe. How many fatals have we had in the past 5 years - not many - and as a percentage of the population of Part 121 pilots I'll bet it's a pretty safe number.

Driving to the airport *IS* the most dangerous part of the trip when it's a Part 121 passenger flight involved - less so if it's charter, even less so if it's self flown, and pretty hairy if it's night freight in bad equipment.
 
Hence, I measure danger (at least in my line of work) by how many things CAN go wrong, the chances of which are increased the more you do it.

Well then you wouldn't do very well in a statistics course, and don't for heavens sake go into the insurance industry, you wouldn't stand a chance.
 
That's flying and pilots in general - we're talking about Part 121 passenger flying - the pilots are as safe as the passengers are, and that's pretty safe. How many fatals have we had in the past 5 years - not many - and as a percentage of the population of Part 121 pilots I'll bet it's a pretty safe number.

Driving to the airport *IS* the most dangerous part of the trip when it's a Part 121 passenger flight involved - less so if it's charter, even less so if it's self flown, and pretty hairy if it's night freight in bad equipment.

Actually that is people that were working as pilots. Not pilots in general and there is more than just Part 121 flying to consider. That is kind of insulting to the CFI's, Charter, Freight, Fractional and other pilots out there.
 
You're pretty naive if you don't think that this job is inherently risky. I'm not saying other jobs are not as risky as flying, because there are a lot of things that can get you killed pretty quickly too, but if things start going wrong up there you don't have many places to go.

Everything is risky - getting out of bed is risky, heck staying in bed is risky you never know what might fall on you. It's all about the level of risk, and the fact that Part 121 passenger pilots are not dieing in droves ipso facto proves that the job has low risk.

WHY it is low risk can be a different debate, sure it might well be because of the lowly paid professionals in the front office, but truth be known almost all Part 121 passenger accidents have significant pilot error as a factor - so clearly we're not doing as well as we could be. The fact is the system has managed out a lot of the risk through systems and procedures, the only thing left they can't manage out is the pilot. So since the pilots are the most significant factor in the cause of death in a Part 121 passenger aircraft explain to me again why they're worth so much money? (it's rhetorical for heaven's sake, even *I* think that's a stupid question).
 
You're probably right. I never took a stats course, I spent my time with ethics classes instead.

Different discussion - for pilots who spent 30 years at an airline, gave up 2-3 marriages, missed their kids births, birthdays, first steps, etc. to be told at the end of that time "hey, the pension we promised you that would make it all worthwhile, yeh sorry, that's not going to happen - write and let us kow how you're making out on $30K a year from the PGBC".

That's immoral, unethical, there aren't enough words to describe just how badly those guys (and gals) got screwed, blued and tattooed.
 
Actually that is people that were working as pilots. Not pilots in general and there is more than just Part 121 flying to consider. That is kind of insulting to the CFI's, Charter, Freight, Fractional and other pilots out there.

The pay discussion is about Part 121 passenger pilots - so shouldn't we consider that group of people when we try and decide how dangerous the job is? I mean if we're going to open it up to anyone then I choose to include coal miners in the pilot profession, and they're dieing like canaries.

CFI's haven't taken a big pay cut for example, neither have Freight nor most fractionals. Doesn't stop them whining, but it's not the nexus of this conversation.
 
Dunno boss, I don't fly passangers and I don't have a reliable jet propelling me around the lower atmosphere. I've got no TCAS, no radar, no GPS and no FMS. Maybe I'll think differently when I get to my retirement job at Southwest.
 
The pay discussion is about Part 121 passenger pilots - so shouldn't we consider that group of people when we try and decide how dangerous the job is? I mean if we're going to open it up to anyone then I choose to include coal miners in the pilot profession, and they're dieing like canaries.

CFI's haven't taken a big pay cut for example, neither have Freight nor most fractionals. Doesn't stop them whining, but it's not the nexus of this conversation.

The course of this thread moved to include all flying jobs at some point. That was what prompted me to post the article stating that the job itself IS Dangerous. Your choice to add coal miners is simply irrelevant to this discussion.
 
I dunno man, you ever put the power up on a TIO-540 on a stall recovery and have them both try to choke out on you because the mixture was moved too far forward (which is what Piper says to do with the mixture control, BTW, full forward)? That'll get you thinking that this gig is dangerous and unforgiving.

EDIT: I know I'm not flying the same equipment as everybody else, and I also know that if I treat my engines properly they'll take care of me (in most situations), but I find the heavier, faster and more complex the equipment gets the more I don't trust it as there are more and more stupid little things you can do to piss off your airplane to the point that it stops working.
 
I dunno man, you ever put the power up on a TIO-540 on a stall recovery and have them both try to choke out on you because the mixture was moved too far forward (which is what Piper says to do with the mixture control, BTW, full forward)? That'll get you thinking that this gig is dangerous and unforgiving.

Cant say that I have. Based on safety records, I'd say that it is a safe job until something goes wrong. Then, it is unforgiving.

I also think, as you mentioned, that it depends on what type of flying you're doing.
 
From my understanding it's a 2 year training period + 10 year commitment = 12 years. Is this incorrect? That's what the Navy guy that lives next to me told me. And that's after the 4-year college, so it's really like a 14-16 year period after highschool.

Anyway, it's a sacrifice. You are signing over your life for 10-12 years. They tell you where you go; they tell you how you like it, etc. It may not be the same as "wasting" your life away, but you are giving it to the government, (for the benefit of others) IMO.

It is not a sacrifice, it is a choice. In return for a million-dollar flight education, good pay and benefits, and the best flight experience you can get, you have to let the military tell you to do for a period of 11-12 years.

Seems pretty fair to me.
 
I wonder why Riddle/UND/ATP/RAA/Etc. dont ever enlighten incoming students to these numbers. Cost of living is going way up and salaries are going WAY down. This career is just brutally sad.

Because they are flight academies. They make money by selling flight training. Doesn't make good sense to sell your product by saying "Come fly with us. You'll spend a $hitload of money for $hitty paying job, lousy QOL, no job security."

Caveat Emptor
 
You are rich when your money works for you, not when you work for your money.

Great. But there seems to be a lack of "definition" on what rich is from a numerical view. You might think rich is $80K a year while I might think its $40K a year.
 
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