Understood. I'm just glad to see there are guys that would use their better judgement, and not let CASS be a definitive restriction against available resources.
That's in interesting view point, but I disagree it's "better judgement". It's the remaining flight crewmemeber's call on that one.
For me, it has nothing to do with CASS. Alot more to do with if that person will be more of a liability I have to watch than if they are a qualified crew member in a situation like that.
Do I want some private pilot, or some for that case, some ATP, that I have no idea if they even know what's going on? Are you really going to give someone your resume to let then know you are qualified while the individual is already juggling ATC, company, diversion planning, MedLink if that's going on? At 7 miles a minute, you could just miss your window of opportunity to get the jet on the ground in the most expeditious manner while you're trying to figure out if the person can even fasten a seatbelt.
If I'm not in uniform or not jumpseating via CASS to let them know I'm a crewmember, I'll sit in first and sleep. I don't even want them to know I'm a crewmember. As a matter of fact, I have a ticket tomorrow. I plan on looking very passengerish, checking my giant freaking rollaboard and relax.
I figure if they need something they'll make an announcement.
As I've stated before, I've sat beside crewmemebers on their first flight in the physical airplane. They were trained a full initial course, and guess what? They had their hands full.
You might be surprised that when the one of us gets up for physiological reasons, the other is able to handle the radio AND make changes necessary to stuff.
It's an emergency at that point, so there is no "right and wrong". There will be armchair quarterbacking and you WILL have to explain your decisions, but that's par for the course. If there is no info gained from the experience to better handle such a situation in the future, the entire experience gained is lost.