pilots flying as pax on their airline

Aussie

New Member
Gday Guys,

Qestion for all the airline pilots out there, or for those of you that know....

Some airlines offer cheap, or free travel for their employees (maybe only pilots). Do they travel in economy, or they can sit in the cockpit for the flight?

If there were free seats in Business would ya do the dodgy and sit in there?

What about when your catching a flight to somewhere for work. EG you are in LAX and need to fly your next sector out of PHX??

Cheers

Aussie
 
Well, from personal experience I can't help much. The airline I ramp ratted for only had one class (and 5 seats at that). However, from what I know some crew (mostly pilots and other operations people are jump seat rated and they can sit up front or in a open seat in the back. As to sitting in first vs. economy? I would bet it has to do with seniority and such. I'm sure someone with more current major experience can tell you more.

Ethan
 
[ QUOTE ]
Some airlines offer cheap, or free travel for their employees (maybe only pilots). Do they travel in economy, or they can sit in the cockpit for the flight?

[/ QUOTE ]

At Delta, domestic travel is free, as well as international travel. But international, you usually end up paying immigration fees to the government of about $40-$60 depending on your destination.

You usually list yourself for first class and then the gate agent will fill first with non-revs, in seniority order and then the coach cabin. And that's company-wide seniority order so no special treatment for mechanics, pilots, rampers, etc.

[ QUOTE ]
If there were free seats in Business would ya do the dodgy and sit in there?

[/ QUOTE ]

I've ridden Business Elite to Europe on several occasions.

[ QUOTE ]
What about when your catching a flight to somewhere for work. EG you are in LAX and need to fly your next sector out of PHX??

[/ QUOTE ]

Deadheading works the same way, except you have a higher boarding priority ("positive space" meaning that they'll bump a revenue passenger to get you to your next segment) than employees traveling for pleasure.
 
Hey Aussie,

When I worked at American Airlines, pre-9/11, things were pretty flexible. What it sounds like you're looking for is a description of how non-revenue standby travel works as it applies to pilots. Heres a brief description of how it worked.

--First off, if a pilot/crew was trying to catch up to a designated flight segment for work purposes, they would generally be allotted confirmed seats on the aircraft.

--Secondly, all AA/AE pilots could fly in any of the company's jumpseats for free if they so chose. This included whether the pilot was trying to fly for personal travel, or commuting between cities. Stipulations to this rule existed when the aircraft were either full or empty. When an aircraft was full, and there were multiple pilots trying to get on that aircraft, they would go by company seniority for that seat. This was kinda rough for the probationary pilots as they could ONLY fly in the jumpseat. If an aircraft was empty, and a pilot was off of probation it worked a little differently. Generally, the boarding agent would designate the pilot with a "jumpseat" boarding pass to board the aircraft. After the pilot boarded the aircraft, he would introduce himself to the flight and cabin crew. Now if the captain was aware that there were seats available in back, he would usually just tell the pilot to "grab a seat." Depending on the aircraft configuration, this could be any seat including those in First, and Business Class. Remember, that the pilot still has a "jumpseat" boarding pass, so this is a pretty nice free ride.

--Last but surely not least, is the wonderful thing known as OA jumpseating. Quite a few airlines, domestic and international, have exchangeable jumpseat priveledges. This allows the participating carrier's pilots to occupy the jumpseat in any given aircraft, space permitting. This is especially useful if a pilot is commuting between their home city and domicile on busy routes.


Hope this has been a help!

Steve
 
No airline gives privileges to pilots that are not extended to all employees (except jumpseat, but that is an FAA thing.)
 
My Uncle works for FedEx (not as a pilot though) and he can ride jumpseat on any of thier flights domestically for free. (don't know if it's jumpseat jumpseat but that's what they call it, so it could be a few seats right next to the cockpit a la "Cast Away")

And then they FedEx has some kind of agreement with another airline where my uncle and his family can sign up to be on any flight for really cheap/free but they are basically on stand-by.
 
Back
Top