ZapBrannigan
If it ain’t a Boeing, I’m not going. No choice.
Ok, i'll go along with that. Just remember, job-security in aviation is an illusion. Save your pennies.
Unfortunately, the industry and my life changed around me. The reasons I got into this business no longer apply. Sure, I still love the flying... (well at least the instrument approaches and landings), but at the end of the day this is the means to an end.
Fly plane. Get paycheck. Go home. Give paycheck to wife. Repeat as necessary.
Sure beats the hell out of:
Sell Insurance. Get paycheck. Go home. Give paycheck to wife.
I am disgruntled and the grass is greener right about now.
I felt as if I needed to start my reply like that so you know where I am coming from.
First off, my suggestion is go marry a rich woman and live off her and fly for fun.
Secondly, there is more to thinking every corporate gig is amazing or ######. I have had both, and let me tell you there really is no in between. I have been in corporate aviation since I was 20. I really can't complain because I do not know where I would be without corporate aviation. I have 4000 + hrs, 3 jet type ratings, and 1000 PIC in jets (trust me I know I am very lucky). I also obtained all this time and knowledge learning from someone that did everything my father. So when I say what I am about to say don't think that I hate corporate aviation because I don't.
I have had 6 jobs already in what 7 years and one of those jobs lasted 5 years. When tax laws change, a company starts under performing, or maintenance bills start piling up the first thing to go is the airplane. Even if you are flying for a fortune 500 company, its a false security blanket you have there. I know Xerox had a flight department that is non existent anymore and what happens 20 years down the line when the aviation department closes or is scaled back.
Personally, I would say to skip the 135 ####. I was gonna try not to swear about 135 but thats all that you can really describe it with. The pilots in a 135 are lower then whale #### in the middle of the pacific. They will try to run you by your duty time and break all kinds of rules with you, and they will keep doing it to you.
I am really not sure what my dream job is yet in aviation. I love what corporate aviation has given me and it is more then the airlines could have ever given to me at this point and im not talking monetary wise, but I am talking about time I got to share something that both my father and I love together with him. When he is gone, I will have some great stories to tell and thats how he will live on through me. My only warning is its not as glamerous as it seems, but niether are the airlines anymore. I think the days of high 800s to 1000s a day in corporate are done. I do a lot of contract work and the rates are dropping as 135s try to make up for added fuel costs which is a bunch of bs because they charge the customer for that. Anyways I probably didnt answer your question, but I feel if you are getting focused on what you are going to do with your aviation career and you arent a PPL yet you have a lot of awkening to do. When you get your first aviation jobn its going to suck for you. Everyone in here has gone through it. You have to pay your dues. You aren't gonna jump into a job with Nike on the G550, it will probably be for Blah Blah BLah Charters Inc. A 135 company out of Youngstown Ohio delivering checks and doing air ambulance with 25 days on and 5 hard days off a month for 29,000 as a FO on a CE525. So dont get your hopes up.
Does it?
I don't know much about selling insurance, but I do know that the insurance salesman doesn't bet his job on the successful outcome of a proficiency check every six months. He isn't required to maintain a medical. He probably works gentleman's hours (8-4 or 9-5) and is home each night to have dinner with his family.
It's all perspective. It is very possible that some Dwight Shrute type might take every bit the amount of joy from selling insurance as you do from flying airplanes.
Ah - another "Some other career choice vs. Flying"
Great, another tool by management stooges to devalue your worth as a pilot because you think it's some great grand amazing adventure. I don't know about you, but I don't want to give management any room to devalue my professional worth.
It's just another job, with a good view. That's it.
It is a paycheck, it pays the bills, you goto work, get another paycheck, pay bills. . .
While you're at work, you hope you picked a stable company that wont go belly up, wash out your pension (HAH!), steal your vacation time, and won't provide health benefits for you and your 2.4 kids.
This whole illusion that (airline / professional) Flying is some great grand adventure is so odd to me. While I plan to fly for a living (and will start later this week), I'm not going to let anyone try to convince me that it is some great grand adventure so that they can use my emotions to devalue my worth as a professional pilot.
It's a job. The End.
Small light twin or single piston flying is indeed a great grand adventure. . .just to clarify.
As I sit here for 36 hours in a hotel in the midwest flipping channels and surfing the internet...(yawn) I wish something exciting would happen!
Sorry guys,
Guess the question is too vague.
Anyway, I'm actually asking these questions because they ARE coming up close. Could be a few years, maybe even months! I already have my ppl and working more on getting a job.
Anyway, I was asking you guys for any comparisons, like Zap's post. Very nice... THAnKS
Nope, not this week. I'm on the Indiana / Ohio border. This is my fourth night away from home in the last week and i'm a bit grumpy about it! (it's very rare for us).