Teaching ground, sure sure, but doing full motion sim instruction? Heck we even have our ground instructors do FTD's, which seems to work out fine, but I think the junior flight instructor here has 15 years seniority?
Teaching ground, sure sure, but doing full motion sim instruction? Heck we even have our ground instructors do FTD's, which seems to work out fine, but I think the junior flight instructor here has 15 years seniority?
I'm gonna throw a stake in the ground and say $69,000/year, depending on position and longevity.
If you've never been in the "non-121 side of the jet industry," please hold your opinions.:insane:Teaching ground, sure sure, but doing full motion sim instruction? Heck we even have our ground instructors do FTD's, which seems to work out fine, but I think the junior flight instructor here has 15 years seniority?
If you've never been in the "non-121 side of the jet industry," please hold your opinions.:insane:
Seriously, my first ground school instructor in the Lear 60 was a RIO on F-4's, and talked like he was the pilot, not a back seater. He had never been in a Lear 60. He was knowledgeable about the airplane due to the crews coming through recurrent educating him on the airplane. I found out about him being a RIO after 2 years of his war stories in recurrent, and to this day am amazed he never once mentioned he is not even a pilot. Yes, I know being a RIO does not mean he could not have flown outside, but he does not have a pilot's certificate from what I have been told. I also had a sim instructor on the 60 that was talking about performance of the airplane. I asked if he had ever flown one, and he said no. I told him the reason I asked, is your performance numbers are unrealistic on what the airplane can do. He had come from the airlines, knew his procedures, but knew nothing about day to day ops in a business jet, much less the daily operation of the airplane I was in recurrent for. He was a retired airline guy. These were both Bombardier instructors.
During initial on the G-450, I was at FSI Savannah, the mecca of Gulfstream. I was told numerous times this airplane can go straight to FL430 max weight no problem. I get into the airplane for the first leg, and the highest we could get, being 5000# less than MTOW, was 39,000'. I do not know where they came up with their information, but with the corporate side of the sim houses, buyer beware if they are talking about day to day ops in the airplane.
So, to answer your question, I would not be surprised if the instructor did not have a type rating. The Examiner will have to have the type, and hopefully he/she has experience in the airplane, but I would not count on it.:beer:
He is a ground school instructor. I'm not sure of all the details about him, but I know he has never flown the line as a pilot.How can you give flight instruction without a pilot certificate?
FSI isn't the airlines.
I'm fairly certain all sim instructors at FSI are typed in the aircraft. They tend to prefer guys with at least jet experience, if not time in type, however that doesn't mean that there aren't some that have neither.
The FSI pay scale is determined by what category of aircraft you instruct on. I don't remember the classifications but it ranged from 40-80k a year. Again, depending on the size/complexity of the aircraft.
I'm fairly certain all sim instructors at FSI are typed in the aircraft. They tend to prefer guys with at least jet experience, if not time in type, however that doesn't mean that there aren't some that have neither.
The FSI pay scale is determined by what category of aircraft you instruct on. I don't remember the classifications but it ranged from 40-80k a year. Again, depending on the size/complexity of the aircraft.
How do you get a gig like that?
Seriously, my first ground school instructor in the Lear 60 was a RIO on F-4's, and talked like he was the pilot, not a back seater. He had never been in a Lear 60. He was knowledgeable about the airplane due to the crews coming through recurrent educating him on the airplane. I found out about him being a RIO after 2 years of his war stories in recurrent, and to this day am amazed he never once mentioned he is not even a pilot. Yes, I know being a RIO does not mean he could not have flown outside, but he does not have a pilot's certificate from what I have been told.
NFOs are essentially co-pilots, for all intents and purposes, in the USN/USMC. Unlike the USAF, which doesn't really utilize the average Navigator in a co-pilot fashion except for a few airframes.
And yet, there are no controls in the back seat of Navy fighters, where in the USAF there are.
Which is indeed an oddity, in terms of how each service views their Nav/NFO aircrew.
How can you give flight instruction without a pilot certificate?