Boris Badenov
Fortis Leader
I don't see the value in the multi crew license. Care to educate me?
Basically, indentured servants with no salable skills work cheap cheap cheap.
I don't see the value in the multi crew license. Care to educate me?
How would you solve the issue, if you were king?
1. The hour requirement for BOTH categories is too low. I would say that 1,000 hours in the focused program with a clearly standardized curriculum in both solid academics in understanding flight theory, systems, IFR procedures, TERPS/PANS-OPS, ATC procedures both FAA and ICAO, regulations, CRM, etc, in an accredited 4 year program that is continually monitored to ensure the accuracy of the programs and academic standards. Military flight training programs would meet this requirement.
2. Non-academic program should be a minimum of 2,000 hours with comprehensive testing required on the above topic areas. These tests would be more in depth than the current ones, including oral exams, and also the requirements for the examiners in both categories would be rigorous to ensure they actually knew this stuff.
Again, this is utterly lacking in GA today. If it were not we would not have inane threads with people claiming lift was "partly Bernoulli and partly Newton" etc.
The problem with asking anyone to come up with a program or course of study that is standard is ego (not the thing you eat). Most people don't have the moral fortitude to look past themselves and realise the path they took up through the ranks isn't the only way to go. With the current generation of "leaders" in this industry and those that have self proclaimed their superiority above all others in terms of knowledge and ability we would end up with such a convoluted, bloated and enormous waste of time for a curriculum that people woule be able to tell you the exact lateral limits of the NAT tracks or how many slugs of pressure are present at FL600 but they wouldn't know the first thing about filing a flight plan, calculating performance, what is supposed to be in your AFM or how to fly a simple visual approach without having to build a 5 mile final with a snow flake glide slope.
seagull
Have you ever attended a 142 school for type specific training?
Once you are done with part 61 or part 141 training, besides the military or airlines, 142 schools are where the majority of "professional" pilots get initial and recurrent training. The three big ones being SimCom, Simuflite CAE, Flitesafety. These are basically the kinds of places you are advocating for and seem to think would be with minimum "bs". I will tell you, that is flat wrong.
I think theory is great but IMHO there is no substitute for experience. An ATP is a qualifier for experience, not perfect but adequate. I think what this discussion has lost sight of is that the Colgan crash made it obvious that a minimum experience qualification was necessary.
1. The hour requirement for BOTH categories is too low. I would say that 1,000 hours in the focused program with a clearly standardized curriculum in both solid academics in understanding flight theory, systems, IFR procedures, TERPS/PANS-OPS, ATC procedures both FAA and ICAO, regulations, CRM, etc, in an accredited 4 year program that is continually monitored to ensure the accuracy of the programs and academic standards. Military flight training programs would meet this requirement.
2. Non-academic program should be a minimum of 2,000 hours with comprehensive testing required on the above topic areas. These tests would be more in depth than the current ones, including oral exams, and also the requirements for the examiners in both categories would be rigorous to ensure they actually knew this stuff.
Again, this is utterly lacking in GA today. If it were not we would not have inane threads with people claiming lift was "partly Bernoulli and partly Newton" etc.
This is what you are advocating. It will turn into what the current 142 school houses are like. Individual POIs with their own agendas and egos screwing it up. Instructors who are more interested in proving to their clients how smart they are than they are providing quality training (ask me about the ABCDEFGH setup for an emergency descent).
This thread has become laughable. The ego's flying around here right now on both sides of this argument are to much for me. I think it's time to take a break. So much I want to say, but it would be wise not to.
Not if it were done right. Maybe sic AFS-900 on them, let them go through the SAI/EPI process and additional audits based on real standards. I do not think the 142 outfits had to go through the ATOS type reviews. An accredited university that had to go through ATOS, ISO 9000, maybe a DOD, IATA and a few other audits, would liely provide the requisite quality control.