Hacker15e
Who am I? Where are my pants?
Light grey -> majors
Dark grey -> regionals> majors
LOL
More like
dark gray => desk => regionals => majors
....but thanks.
Last edited:
Light grey -> majors
Dark grey -> regionals> majors
LOL
More like
dark gray => desk => regionals => majors
....but thanks.
We've got lots of both light and dark grey guys at my shop. You'll do fine. Bud of mine came here directly from a pre-retirement tour at an AETC tech school base, which had no flying activities at all.
As you probably already know, the lack of attention of a recruiting department is not necessarily a judgment on your flying abilities, at all.More like
dark gray => desk => regionals => majors
....but thanks. Perhaps someday I'll rise to your level of awesomeness, but for now I'll just have to accept my position as a substandard pilot.
As you probably already know, the lack of attention of a recruiting department is not necessarily a judgment on your flying abilities, at all.
Indeed, unless you've busted a bunch of rides, you won't find a single thing about ability on an application.
Yeah, pretty much where I am, very much involuntarily.
I've looked at all manner of other ways to get around it, including trying to find a part-time job that involves multi turbine time (like flying jumpers in a King Air, etc) that I could work around my full time AF job.
Unfortunately, I've had a pretty tough year in terms of deployments -- was gone during May-July, and will be leaving again October-January, so that makes it very difficult to get a civilian flying job.
I know I have competitive quals at the big ACMIs and majors, but I just have to get over the currency/recency bar in the short term to get there.
Excellent. If I can do anything, let me know.Fortunately, I have not busted a bunch of rides (although I do have a minor skeleton in the closet that several folks on JC know about), but I'm acutely aware that my lack of currency/recency given the current applicant pool means that I'm not a bright and shiny penny that majors will be fighting over each other to hire.
I'm prepared to slog it out, apply everywhere, study up and prep for interviews, and do my time to get to where I want to eventually be. This is a chess game, not a checkers game. I didn't get through a 20-year military career by expecting instant gratification.
If you have your civilian ratings, bite the bullet and go find a multi engine to rent so that you can maintain currency.
Lesson 1: Nobody gives a crap how you did it:Just don't be the stereotypical zoomie and you'll be fine @Hacker15e - and you don't strike me as the kind of guy who'll say "well in the F15 we did it this way," every three to five minutes. Come fly medevac when you get done, from the looks of this place so far, it's going to be pretty awesome. You have a family and stuff don't you? Medevac is the way to go!
I feel fortunate that my last flying assignment was in a two-pilot, non-fighter aircraft. I gained a lot of wisdom and insight about that type of crew operations in that job which I feel will help me not be "that fighter guy" at an airline interview or training program.
Then again, my personality may just be the turn-off.![]()
You can't be any worse than the recently retired O6, former SAC B-52 Wing CC I had to fly with years ago! Talk about someone who didn't like being a subordinate.....
One of my classmates at Eagle (!) was a B-52 guy. Super cool, rock solid, awesome late-40s, early-50s guy. I'm sure he was a blast to fly with.Man, I just love hearing about dudes like that...guys who can't let go of the fact that when they leave the military, nobody gives a rat's behind what they used to be.
I have an acquaintance who left the AF right after his initial hitch was up, and was hired at a then-new LCC. He had a quick upgrade to Capt because of the company's expansion, and a few years later in the right seat he had his own, previous USAF Wing Commander as his shiny new F/O!
What do you mean I can't just launch?Just don't be the stereotypical zoomie and you'll be fine @Hacker15e - and you don't strike me as the kind of guy who'll say "well in the F15 we did it this way," every three to five minutes. Come fly medevac when you get done, from the looks of this place so far, it's going to be pretty awesome. You have a family and stuff don't you? Medevac is the way to go!
Although to be fair, I often battle with the whole, "well at my old job," or "well in Alaska, I" within myself.
Man, I just love hearing about dudes like that...guys who can't let go of the fact that when they leave the military, nobody gives a rat's behind what they used to be.
I have an acquaintance who left the AF right after his initial hitch was up, and was hired at a then-new LCC. He had a quick upgrade to Capt because of the company's expansion, and a few years later in the right seat he had his own, previous USAF Wing Commander as his shiny new F/O!
I think that guy was carrying a big box out to my car at Fry's the other day, actually.Almost every former military pilot I've ever worked with. If you can try to not be that guy, I'll do my damndest to not talk bush-flying. I mean, man, I'd love to go fly a F14/F15/F16/F-AnyTeen... but especially in the guys who've been out for like 10 or 15 years...yeah... it's like the guy who is super proud of being captain of the football time in high school..
Is there any?
To preface, I'm not trying to start a fight or a *this pilot's background vs this pilot's background*. You're all the same after 4000 hours anyways...
Say someone with 2 types and getting crew time occasionally in both seats on a turbo-prop, single pilot in the other plane. Getting paid 60k, 75k soon. 135 cargo.
Is there anything really valuable to jumping to a regional or crappy ACMI carrier to "check the box"? To go further, to fly a part 25 jet or civilian jet in general? I'm seeing two major flaws in the opinions of the latter, but we can discuss.
I'm not talking networking opportunities or going somewhere to get contacts. I'm talking practical application of the experience. Is there a pay incentive as an FO only at a regional that I'm missing vs the above?
Yes, this is a "I know a guy thread"...
@z987k @Jfk-Pilot @SA227driver @Avalon781ML @Inverted
I meant compared to 135 pax. In that regard a 121 pax pilot is way closer to a box hauler than a charter pilot customer service wise. Even in medevac I did about 6 billion times more customer service than as a 121 pilot. Maybe the difference is that I could actually make a difference then. I could go in the FBO or drive over to a place that sells food and cater it myself if whoever hasn't shown and it's 15 till departure, or if the guys wouldn't marshal me out, just go pull the chocks and drive away. Make things happen. Make sure people got where they were going, and on time.There is a second component to this. Another post in this thread made mention of part 121 requiring "almost no customer service" compared to Part 135. I wholeheartedly disagree with that point of view, but it does raise a good point. You appear to have little or no "passenger service" experience. As a cargo aircraft pilot you may have customer service experience (shippers, receivers, etc), but you have no "passenger service" experience. See the difference? I think it's fair to say passenger airlines want pilots who will be alert and responsive to passenger concerns.