Maximilian_Jenius
Super User
viper548 said:Knock up the Chief Pilot's daughter....that's the fastest way to the regionals
Was that an after school special that I missed?
-Matthew
viper548 said:Knock up the Chief Pilot's daughter....that's the fastest way to the regionals
Doug Taylor said:Fastest way to become a doctor? Go to a Jamaican medical school.
Seriously, don't continuously ask the same question over and over until you get an answer you like, this isn't that type of a website.
If you want a straight answer from a professional, ask away.
But if you're looking for a 'school counselor'-style answer to a question, this isn't the place.
supercell86 said:Thanks for the replies.....but some of you are getting a bit confused.....my question is what is the FASTEST way to the reginols....not the BEST way, as bad as that sounds i was just wondering....im in college now, have my PPL, and working on the INST rating, and i prob. will end up going to college for 2-4 yrs.....but as i said what is the FASTEST way to the reginols...not the BEST way....thanks alot....
Aviator737 said:Supercell, I know it's difficult to understand why all these cool guys with a job you want are telling you to wait on flying (or at least jet flying) and go to college now. I was in the exact same position a year ago - I was absolutely determined to be at a regional airline by the age of 21. I didn't care about college, I just wanted to be behind the yoke of a jet. I would do everything I could to reason to myself why it was better to go to flight school rather than college - this despite the fact that almost every single pilot I talked to said "go to college!" I even started the ATP program, and halfway through the cross-country time-building phase, discontinued. Why? It finally hit me I'd be doing this for forty years, staring at instruments day in and day out. Fun, yes, but ... well it gets kinda old, too. Sometimes I woulda just as soon been on the ground hanging out with friends or playing my Playstation 2. When you're being thrown around by dispatch (or turbulence), forced to sleep in a hotel room far from home, it gets you thinking, "Maybe a 9-5 office job and a weekend 172 would be better after all."
As DE727 said, if you want to fly something bigger than a CRJ someday, you're gonna need a bachelor's degree. Period. As for online school, I've taken two online classes, and I did not enjoy them at all. I won't take any more if I can help it. They are much more difficult than on-campus classes. You can't raise your hand and ask a question. You can't see your professor do sample problems on the board. You can't lean over to the classmate sitting next to you and ask them to explain something.
Obviously, it's a decision you have to make for yourself. But don't make a decision you think you might regret. Enjoy your time NOW - you can't go back, you won't be 19 or 20 again. If you go to college, and enjoy the experience college offers, work on your ratings on the side (or as part of a degree program), and get hired when you're 23 - you'll still have thirty-seven years to stare at instruments.
supercell86 said:I was thinking however, of just being an Airline Pilot for about 10-20 years, and then doing something else for the Aviation industry, whether it be managemnet, ATC, or somethign elseIf you want to get into ATC, you have to be hired before your 31, or be a prior military controller. You know I thought that the fastest was the best too. In fact I was really proud of my self that I got my PPL in 42 hours. WOW...I must be shat hot. Then when I started my instrument I realized that I cheated myself, and my old instructor failed to teach me a lot of things I needed to know. So although it was fast, it certainly wasn't the best, and in the end, you'll pay for it. Good Luck.
[off-topic]nc1982 said:Dang, first post has to be like this...
<snip>
Nick
jrh said:Dude...think about what you're saying.
People that do something strictly the fastest way, without considering quality, aren't very well respected in life. And that goes for any career or activity, not just flying. Is that really what you want?
If your mom rides on a plane, does she deserve to have the fastest, cheapest, most minimally qualified pilot? Or does she deserve the BEST? Do you want to be the fastest, most minimally qualified guy? Or do you want to be the best guy?
Throw out all the arguments about what Pay For Training does to the industry, the safety of low time pilots in jets, the respect you will or will not get...throw all that out for a minute. Think about if you're going to be able to look back on how you got to where you are five years from now and be satisfied with the way things went.
Personally, if I took the absolute fastest way to get into a jet cockpit, I doubt I would be happy with what I had done. You have to consider what is going to make you proud of yourself down the road, not just the easiest way to accomplish Goal A, Goal B, and Goal C.
Doug Taylor said:it probably won't cure the 'get there itis", but only about 45% of my job is actually flying.
Even better, ask MikeD, who is a pilot in the USAF, how much he actually flies in an average month.
Doug Taylor said:Lord no.
Last thing is another captain browsing the website, showing up for the rotation and screaming "Hey! You tell (insert user name here) to kiss my (blank)!"![]()