31 and positive that I will not be a pilot forever, I'm in the process of deciding how to gracefully replace my pilot income and diversify. Airbus says they can do it today, and I believe them.
31 and positive that I will not be a pilot forever, I'm in the process of deciding how to gracefully replace my pilot income and diversify. Airbus says they can do it today, and I believe them.
Boeing said the Max was good to go....soooo.....
Buy rental property. Make your backup a passive income stream. Although I’d say you’re unlikely to lose your career due to automation during your lifetime.
Sadly the fact is that the pilots didn't exactly improve the situation in this previous two crashes.The irony of companies that can't get an AOA indicator right talking about pilotless planes is not lost on me.
Sadly the fact is that the pilots didn't exactly improve the situation in this previous two crashes.
I wonder if there were any other instances where the pilots fixed the issue themselves. I hevent read up on this enough to know.
Suppose single pilot 797 is better than no pilot airbus. I’m 35 and doubt I’ll finish my career actually inside an airplane but that’s just me. More reason to diversify your income
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AP Interview: Airbus is ready for pilotless jets - are you?
LE BOURGET, France (AP) — The chief salesman for Airbus says his company already has the technology to fly passenger planes without pilots at all — and is working on winning over regulators and travelers to the idea.apnews.com
31 and positive that I will not be a pilot forever, I'm in the process of deciding how to gracefully replace my pilot income and diversify. Airbus says they can do it today, and I believe them.
JCers: The 737 is a dinosaur from ancient history
Also JCers: New tech is going to take away our jobs
Almost 60 years since the dawn of the 737 there are still FEs. The 737, imo, was the beginning of the end for FEs, but it has taken more than 60 years to "kill them off."
If you are 30 now, and you decide to go to a major, twenty years from now you should have enough seniority that if single pilot airliners start to encroach on your work, you will be upstream of the pain. And twenty years is wildly optimistic. Last time it took nearly a half a century.
I, too, am in my 30s, and a late starter in aviation. I'm not remotely worried about automation ruining my career path.
the second (plus about 20-40 years for design, certification, construction, testing, and distribution) it is cheaper to remove a pilot than install a piece of equipment the companies will make it happen.
How many as a percentage in comparison to the "Glory days?"
Barely any. You've got Lynden in the C130, Everts in the DC6, and a few broke-dick jet operators and a smattering here and there.
Meanwhile navigators are totally dead as a species. There's not even a way to get the certificate any more.
Automation is coming, the second it is cheaper to remove a pilot than install a piece of equipment the companies will make it happen. They'd be dumb not to.
Some Fed should be able to do it. I always thought it'd be a fun one.Meanwhile navigators are totally dead as a species. There's not even a way to get the certificate any more.
We generally don't get to hear about a lot of near misses, because the standard response to "maybe we should file an ASAP" is often "well but we didn't break any rules."I wonder if there were any other instances where the pilots fixed the issue themselves. I hevent read up on this enough to know.
Well that and the ASAP program is a black hole. You'd never see public statistics of things like that come out of it. And despite all evidence to the contrary, the FAA will say - nope haven't seen any reports on that while sitting on 500 reports of it happening.We generally don't get to hear about a lot of near misses, because the standard response to "maybe we should file an ASAP" is often "well but we didn't break any rules."
Yeah.Well that and the ASAP program is a black hole. You'd never see public statistics of things like that come out of it. And despite all evidence to the contrary, the FAA will say - nope haven't seen any reports on that while sitting on 500 reports of it happening.
I admit I will likely be submitting less ASAPs in the future due to recent stuff I learned at my airline. ASAP isn't as clean as it sounds.the standard response to "maybe we should file an ASAP" is often "well but we didn't break any rules."
I'd quote books to you on this topic except you aren't the one who needs to hear it - your bosses are.I admit I will likely be submitting less ASAPs in the future due to recent stuff I learned at my airline. ASAP isn't as clean as it sounds.
Honestly I love the idea of ASAP and at a different company I would be glad to return to filing ASAPs as I have in the past. Trust is a big factor in the ASAP world.I'd quote books to you on this topic except you aren't the one who needs to hear it - your bosses are.
I admit I will likely be submitting less ASAPs in the future due to recent stuff I learned at my airline. ASAP isn't as clean as it sounds.