I wouldn't worry about it too much Ian. Nothing you can really do about it anyways. And if your run does get slashed you'll become a floater out of BDL. Something you've already considered.Hmm...
Yeah, the guys who work at BDL have been forecasting doom and gloom with our BOA work. They pretty accurately predicted the demise of 168. They *think* my run is okay, but you really never know. If the BOA work out of Hartford goes away, a jet could pretty easily fill the rest of my run.
If the guys are old they are Lear Captain floaters.Are the LCK floaters the guys I see hanging out all night or are they also sent out to cover runs?
If so...who are the guys that are just hanging out all night?
-mini
If the guys are old they are Lear Captain floaters.
Young ones with Airnet polos are Lear SICs waiting to do IOE or possibly prop children waiting on 'Jo and/or Van training.
Young ones with street clothes are IPTP peeps.
For the most part LCK prop floaters are always flying so they don't really hang out much.
Last summer there was at any one time 10-15 guys sitting in the kitchen and they all were waiting for runs. Oh how times have changed.
Oh no. If you aren't currently living in Columbus you'll definetly need a crash pad. You won't fly all 8 days. You can probably chance it for a few weeks but eventually you'll need to spend a few nights in Columbus.Gotcha...just trying to figure out if I'm going to need a crash pad in the LCK area if I end up getting a "floater" spot down there.
Sounds like I can probably skip it with all the flying.
-mini
Flying near, around and through tstorms
Is getting thoes boxes there that much quicker really worth risking your life?
Oh no. If you aren't currently living in Columbus you'll definetly need a crash pad. You won't fly all 8 days. You can probably chance it for a few weeks but eventually you'll need to spend a few nights in Columbus.
Don't go there.So flying through tstroms is all part of the job? Is getting thoes boxes there that much quicker really worth risking your life?
It's been a long day so this may be a little rough but deal... Seriously what happens if you have to cover a run out of LCK? Where do you think you'll stay? Second the amount of choices you'll have if you pass training is ten times the amount most of us had. Trying waiting for 3 months and then getting assigned someplace you dread. What do you want them to do? It's an outstation based airline. And things could be alot worse then getting assigned a 5 day run out of training. Seriously your b*itching is getting tiring and you haven't even touched an airplane yet.Interesting. I thought the idea of "floating" was that you show up at your base and go somewhere away from the base for 8 days. Was that just a marketing tactic used by recruiting?
As for training...don't worry, I'm studying pretty hard for it. I don't want to put the cart before the horse, but at the same time, if I get assigned a 5 day run in Omaha...passing training isn't really going to matter. I think that's something the company could do better with new hires.
-mini
Don't go there.
Really. Don't.
Ha! Yes sir, I am so very, very sorry. The question was not directed at you anyway, unless you consider flying through thunderstorms all a part of the job. Be it hauling boxes, executives or the general public.
I have a lot of respect for freight pilots. You guys have a very tough job made worse by long/bad hours for little money in relatively poorly equipped airplanes. What I do not respect is the attitude I see from a few pilots (and not only freight pilots!) that they have to get the job done no mater what. Hopefully you agree with me on that.
Alex.
I do consider it part of my job to fly through thunderstorms.
Do you have any idea how much money I make, how poorly equipped my plane is and how bad my hours are?
A plane doesn't have to have all glass to be well equipped. Sadly with the way your young career is shaping up you'll probably never fly a /W jet.
Don't pass judgement on things you haven't experienced and on people you don't know.
Just slow up on the sterotypes. You'd be surprised how nice freight flying is compared to regionals.
Interesting. I thought the idea of "floating" was that you show up at your base and go somewhere away from the base for 8 days. Was that just a marketing tactic used by recruiting?
As for training...don't worry, I'm studying pretty hard for it. I don't want to put the cart before the horse, but at the same time, if I get assigned a 5 day run in Omaha...passing training isn't really going to matter. I think that's something the company could do better with new hires.
-mini
Damn good advice, there.
To add to that - if that scenario happens to you, you can always change it. Plenty of runs open these days.
Speaking of open runs - I notice a lot of Priority Air guys covering runs for us. Anyone know anything about that company?