SlumTodd_Millionaire
Most Hated Member
66.49 years is the average age of the "permanently defunct" SouthernJetter.
Seriously? That's kinda scary.
66.49 years is the average age of the "permanently defunct" SouthernJetter.
That is an uncomfortable, unpleasant thought.66.49 years is the average age of the "permanently defunct" SouthernJetter.
That assumes they retire at 65. There might be a case that if they were still working it might extend it a few years till they die on the job.
Oh, I thought you were referring to that study from the early 2000s that had retirement age and death age.The data does not assume retiring at 65.
Yikes. Who figured that out and why?66.49 years is the average age of the "permanently defunct" SouthernJetter.
Oh, I thought you were referring to that study from the early 2000s that had retirement age and death age.
Yikes. Who figured that out and why?
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Ya, it'd be interesting to try to find some causation. How long they did what, look at the early retirees vs old, etc.Any effort to break it out based on what kind of flying the guys tended to do most of their careers? I'm wondering if there might be any correlation between long-haul flying and life expectancy.
The last paragraph of that article says ALPA is opposed to it.
That's quite soberingIt means "go live now" because your wining, dining and "ZOMG!!! I got a green slip" doesn't mean jack if you don't stay healthy to enjoy it.
It means "go live now" because your wining, dining and "ZOMG!!! I got a green slip" doesn't mean jack if you don't stay healthy to enjoy it.
Great, now there is something wrong with me because I am technologically competent and don't have a facebook account. JC does not disappoint!
I absolutely will and I'll never take my time off for gran- 16 credit hours to do one leg? Damn? Just sitting there?It means "go live now" because your wining, dining and "ZOMG!!! I got a green slip" doesn't mean jack if you don't stay healthy to enjoy it.
You're ignoring the fact that your extended two years is in the right seat and not the left, or at least in lower paying equipment. The only guy who gets an extended 2 years of pay is the guy already in the captain seat in maxed out equipment. Everyone else has to work longer than he originally planned to work in order to make the same amount of money. Again, it's just math.
To the best of my knowledge, while Japan's laws for "commercial pilots" allow retirement at 67, I don't believe any of their airlines operating internationally allow retirement after 65, so it's not an issue. Pilots retire from the Japanese airlines at 65 and then can go fly for a small intra-country operator until later, but there's no flying at JAL until 67. It's possible this has changed, but I doubt it.
I seriously doubt it. At least in the foreseeable future.
Exactly. I’m about a year from 737 captain. I don’t know if I’d be more pissed if they passed an age extension just before that delayed my upgrade or just after that left me on short call reserve for 2 years.
I don't understand the epilepsy test.
What they need is a cognitive aptitude test. Multi tasking 3 or more items and 3d spatial awareness.