I believe ATP puts out some good, well rounded pilots-like the kinds of Airdale and one of my favorites, CaptainBob.
Why Thank You!
DE727UPS said:
No disagreement, there. But I don't buy that the end result of ACPP is a superior product because of that. You still got a guy that lacks real world experience and any kind of seasoning teaching the airline pilots of tomorrow.
ACPP works, the system works, guys get hired quick, everybody is happy. I just refuse to believe that the time taken to gain experience doesn't count for something. I know it does. Don't need first hand knowledge to know that. Sorry I have such high standards and expect so much in an airline pilot.
No need to apologize for taking pride in your profession Don. Being prior military, I appreciate the fact that ATP is very standardized. I might not have had a lot of "experience" flying around in the clouds shooting approaches with my students when I was a CFI there, but I had discipline to follow procedures and checklists to get through it. And in my opinion, keeping in mind I was a heavy wx crew instructor in the CG, sometimes having discipline and standardization in place can substitute for experience.
I remember trying to help my student navigate some bad weather on a night IFR x/c. I didn't have much "experience" with that, but I followed our company policy and procedures and we were able to avoid danger and land safely.
I was giving a student an IPC with 400 overcast in rain and winds 10-15kts. We shot an ILS approach where the student started to get disoriented and wouldn't relinguish control of the aircraft. I didn't have any "experience" with this situation, but I reacted based on my previous training and follow standard procedures. We survived.
I was coming in to land at RDU with a x/c partner. We pick up windshear and started loosing airspeed fast. I didn't have any experience, but I reacted based on my training and procedures and we lived to see another day.
I shut down the left engine during training with a student. The engine was reluctant to airstart. I didn't have any experience with engines not starting during an airstart, but I followed procedures based on the standardization of my training and I was able to restart the engine at 2000AGL while on approach. We landed safely.
My point Don, is that you use the word experience like its a red headed step child. You throw it around and slap it up against the wall. But no matter what kind of experience you have, there will come a day where you will rely on procedures and standardization to bail you out because your experience will not be enough. I have many more "experiences" like the ones mentioned above, they have helped me develop confidence, but they have not caused me to deviate from standardization and procedures.
Why do we read checklists everytime we fly even after we have the checklist memorized from doing it so many times? Discipline and standardization. I've been flying with Captains who can recite every single item on every single checklist. But when we run checklists, they have the checklist in front of them. With their experience, can't we just run the checklist by memory?
In initial 121 training, we watch countless videos on the breakdown of CRM. I can remember 3-4 situations where the Captain, with not thousands of hours, but ten thousand hours of experience, deviated from the standardization and procedures implimented and the aircraft crashed. British Airways comes to mind on that one. The Captain disabled the stick pusher, the aircraft stalled. Experience is a two way street that can help you or hurt you. Thats why airlines have procedures and standardized callouts.
I just don't buy your experience excuse anymore. Experience in hand flying approaches and aircraft control? I agree. Experience working with ATC, busy airports? I agree. Experience with weather? I agree. But how much "experience" does it take to fly an airplane and learn how to talk on the radio? I think every pilot needs some experience having responsibility in the air, so in that respect I disagree with 250hr pilots flying passengers. But even just a few months of instructing time can rapidly change that. You will be forever learning and gaining experience as a Professional pilot. Today I flew 2 out of 4 legs, all solid IMC the whole way, shot 1 full ILS approach and 1 ILS with vectors, I also had my best landing yet in the Beech, CL, TDZE and so soft you could barely feel the mains touch. And that was with a 15kt crosswind at LGA.