notawannabee
New Member
Longhaul, FlyingNinja,.. everybody.... I cannot thank you enough for sharing your stories. I hope that this thread will serve others as well as it has me. I have a new level of awareness :sitaware:
wait a minute.. so you don't have everything you need to get at least a regional job? cargo? corporate? CFI gig?Flying Ninja said:Yes, definitely be very careful with financials if you are planning on entering flight training and this career. I recently graduated out of CAPT and I'm about $100K in the hole. I'm at a point where the first year FO pay will not cover my monthly bare minimum expenses with no disposable income. Hence, my flight training has left me at a dead end. I was a career changer, and now I'm going back to what I was doing before so that I can pay off this loan. My certifications all amount to a glorified Private certificate. Imagine that...$100K to exercise your PVT privileges. And to add insult to injury, I won't be flying this year or maybe next year because after training, I'm broke.
If you're going into this field, absolutely do your homework. Ask the questions you know you want to ask but are afraid to. The questions you don't ask could land you in my position...high debt and no flying job.
Kristie said:wait a minute.. so you don't have everything you need to get at least a regional job? cargo? corporate? CFI gig?
Kristie said:wait a minute.. so you don't have everything you need to get at least a regional job? cargo? corporate? CFI gig?
JEP said:You get a dc9 type.
notawannabee said:Do you have CFI rating ?
notawannabee said:Do you have CFI rating ?
Kristie said:What would it take to get your CFI rating?
I hate seeing someone so close be so far...there should be something out there that can help you get those extra flying hours! it might take 2 jobs.. it might take living at home longer...eating ramen noodles longer...
Texguy said:Wouldn't freight pay a little better than 1st year regional pay? What kind of hours are needed these days to be a freight dawg?
Depends on the job. No matter what, it would probably require 1200TT at a minimum unless you could get on someplace as an F/O in larger equipment (that requires an F/O).Texguy said:Wouldn't freight pay a little better than 1st year regional pay?
Flying Ninja said:I don't have a CFI rating. And no, CAPT does not offer you a CFI. I don't recall reading any information on a partial refund if you don't get hired. If you can find documentation to that effect, I'd love to see it.
As it stands, unless someon hires me out of my parent's basement with the hours that I have, there's no way I can afford to be living elsewhere trying to get hours. I think the saying is "so close yet so far" in my case.
Regarding the loan, I also have a loan based on LIBOR and the percentage is 7.5% which basically means I got about $1000 a month in payments. Good times...
Flying Ninja said:Yes, definitely be very careful with financials if you are planning on entering flight training and this career. I recently graduated out of CAPT and I'm about $100K in the hole. I'm at a point where the first year FO pay will not cover my monthly bare minimum expenses with no disposable income. Hence, my flight training has left me at a dead end. I was a career changer, and now I'm going back to what I was doing before so that I can pay off this loan. My certifications all amount to a glorified Private certificate. Imagine that...$100K to exercise your PVT privileges. And to add insult to injury, I won't be flying this year or maybe next year because after training, I'm broke.
If you're going into this field, absolutely do your homework. Ask the questions you know you want to ask but are afraid to. The questions you don't ask could land you in my position...high debt and no flying job.
B767Driver said:I'm pretty hard core with the "no debt" philosophy...but here it is --- Never take out a loan for anything! Save up and pay for it when you have the money. That includes college, cars, clothes, etc. The house may be the only exception...but then...ten to fifteen year mortgage max...and plunk down a large down payment.