What is the point then? 3 years ago pilots needed 250 hrs of ME time and that is what it should be now? They had to suffer, so these new guys shall too?
I think what Merit was saying is that it's not about being able to do a Vmc demo or a single engine ILS. You were right before when you doubted if an RJ could flip you over if you lost an engine on rotation. A V1 cut is actually pretty easy. The stab trim is set for the plane to rotate at V2 so all you have to do is keep it going straight with the rudder. I did a few V1 cuts in the sim last time where I didn't even touch the yoke. Rudder to keep the plane tracking straight and then like magic at V2 it will lift off. You don't need ANY multi engine time to do that. (A TR deployment is a whole different story though).
The point is that with more time you will have better decision making skills. Should I descend now or wait? Wat rate do I need? Do I need flaps yet? Is the landing unstable enough that I should go around? The weather is XXXX do I need an alternate? If I start hydroplaning on take off what should I do? There are thousands of things that you will see for the first time in an airplane. I would bet even 15,000 hour captains see new stuff every trip.
Just because this thread is about ASA, and ASA screwed me over the other day, here's a story that ties in nicely to what we are talking about here.
I was working Charlotte to Jacksonville, NC. It's an uncontrolled field with a 6000 foot north-south runway. The airspace overhead is controlled by Wilmington Approach and there is restricted airspace 4 miles to the east. We were out of 5000 feet with the field in sight arriving from the west when an ASA plan called up Wilmington to request release. They said they were ready to go. So, ILM cleared them to fly runway heading off of the south runway up to 10000, void if not off in 8 minutes. We were told that ILM had released an aircraft and to plan to overfly the field and enter the left downwind (no right traffic for the airport even with the restricted airspace because the airport manager is an idiot). As we crossed over the field (I was talking on CTAF and ILM) we both looked for an RJ departing the runway. There wasn't any. We looked on TCAS to see if he had already left. No RJ. We looked down at the gates, and sure enough, there was the ASA plane just pushing back. So, we turned downwind and tower told us to expect a turn to base shortly. I was about to inform him that the ASA plane wasn't off the ground yet and we could still see it when he turned us a dogleg final. At that point the ASA plane was about halfway to the runway. We were still at 3000 feet about 3 miles from the runway completely unconfigured. ILM says something like "huh... I still don't have that departure on radar." I then tell him that that is because the guy is just taxiing out now. Of course right then he busts his void time and calls up ILM to ask for another one. Meanwhile they think we are still east of the airport and ask us to do a 360 and then enter the left downwind while he gets the departure out. Of course by now we are WAY past the airport to the west about abeam midfield. I tell him we will turn back to the north and make a right base to final. He says that is fine, ASA reports airborn and just as we turn final a King Air takes off going the other way, and makes an early turn as to not hit us on the way in.
The moral to my story is 2 things.
First, ASA, don't call for release at the gate in OAJ. It screws up everything.
Second, I am no super pilot at all (well, actually, pilot not flying), but there is NO WAY that a 500/50 hour pilot would have their head in the game enough to keep track of 2 radios, an airport, an airplane on the ground, restricted airspace and the airplane's handling characteristics in order to know if and when we could have actually made the runway.