So be it. I'm just going to have to disagree then. I don't serve at the captain's pleasure. I show up to work to do my job whether it be flying the airplane, doing the paperwork, catching items on the walkaround, etc. I am not there to "make the captain look good" whatever that means. I'm there to fly the airplane safety and catch his mistakes and hope he catches mine.
We are a crew. Your whole subordinate, captain's pleasure rhetoric is not representative of a crew environment. This isn't the Titanic.
Accidents happen when Captains assert that kind of tone in the cockpit. I hope you don't give your F/Os this speech. I recently flew with a Captain Authority who didn't know his airplane and on two occasions I had to step over his "I'm the Captain authority" bullsh * t and tell him to call maintenance for a problem that maintenance told us when they got there we could not leave without having fixed.
Not saying that you're promoting this. Just saying that your tone accommodates this type of environment.
P& H,
You are completely missing the target of my post. You are unable to comprehend the meaning of "serving at the captain's pleasure" and your ego won't let you get past the play on words. This does not mean you are there to please him, get him coffee, sing to him, cater to his freakish needs, shine his shoes, carry his bags or play social director on layovers.
It means you are subordinate to the captain and to assist him in carrying out the flight in the manner and leadership style he chooses to display. You are not equals in the cockpit, although you should be a very valuable resource to the captain.
A leader/subordinate relationship is EXACTLY what a crew environment entails. Leadership skills are important...but just as important are followership skills. If you don't know how to be a good subordinate/follower...you are most likely demonstrating poor crew skills and are a serious drag on your captain.
If, as an F/O, you are faced with a situation, whereby its level of criticality will affect the safety of the flight...then your job is to apply assertive pressure to the captain appropriate to the criticality of the situation.
If, during the normal course of operations, you think you are equal in authority or status to the captain....you need to rethink your position.
BTW, I know something about being an F/O. I currently am one...and have about 7000hrs of copilot time.
I serve at the pleasure of the captain, it's my job to make him look good and I don't try to assert myself inappropriately into his leadership style in situations of low criticality.
When I was a captain, my leadership style was business casual. Do things right, without being rigid. I typically would empower copilots to make their own decisions while flying their legs...my only request was fly smoothly and in a manner that would facilitate passenger comfort.
In a BE1900 without autopilot or FMS...the stick and rudder technique of the pilot flying was very critical in respect to comfort.