ScorpionStinger
Well-Known Member
Total amateur non-airliners.net comment.
Like ^^ dude said, that's a 145.
The easiest give away is the narrow center pedestal, 2 FMS width, compared to a boat load of room on the 170.
Low blow.
Total amateur non-airliners.net comment.
Like ^^ dude said, that's a 145.
The easiest give away is the narrow center pedestal, 2 FMS width, compared to a boat load of room on the 170.
Question...
A new hire can come to training for 2 days. Is this 2 days of Indoc? Or two days of ground school? Get a seniority, leave for up to 90 days, then come back to complete the rest of their training (GS, SIM, IOE, etc)? Am I reading that right?
Basically get all your background checks out of the way. When I started 3 years ago, it took 4 days to get to ground school stuff. If you don't come back, I was told it is a failure on your pria.
Plenty of plans to grow, we have parked airplanes right now because we need new guys. As soon as we can staff all of our current flying upgrade opportunity will increase as well.
Plenty of plans to grow, we have parked airplanes right now because we need new guys. As soon as we can staff all of our current flying upgrade opportunity will increase as well.
A lot of airlines have plans to grow right now. And none of us can find the new hires to do so... Plans don't equal actual growth.
http://www.transstates.net/careers/Pages/Rotor-to-Wings.aspx
Looks like the Army is really gonna need to step up its retention game.
I know you guys baulk at a lot of the QOL and have every reason to, but for guys doing back to back year long deployments just about anything is gonna look enticing.
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The AA wholly owned have had the rotor transition for a year or two I believe. Supposedly a decent source of pilots at envoy from what I hear.
I've flown with quite a few FOs lately that were military rotor guys. You definitely have to be a bit more mindful flying with a guy that only has around 300 fixed wing and 80 multi. TSA also isn't known for spoon feeding you in training so it's a steep learning curve for a lot of those guys.
Compared to a C152 driver/instructor, with no FMS or Turbine operation skills and experiences???
I think Rotor guys are great stick & rudder seat of the pants flyers. More familiar with automation and complexity of Flight Deck vs a Flight Instructor.
Great move by WO'd and TSA IMHO... No spoon feeding will be required. I've gone through training with them, they've been pretty solid & know now to study. Maybe u had a bad experience with 1, don't let that bleed off into the rest. U had an anomaly if that is the case. Rotor folks are on point.
Btw... Not long ago thousands of 250/hrs TT wet commercial pilots were getting hired to fly RJ's... They seemed to turn out alright.