Did I mention I drive to work, and have weekends off?
PIC is PIC, but it is known that Jet time helps- even if it isnt PIC. Every major you go to (unless a 727 for fedex or the 8 at UPS) will be flying jets with glass/FMS. It is a plus to show that you have used it before. If you have good QOL and get a good bit of time flying the t-props it becomes a tough decision to go and start at the bottom of a list as an SIC (unless its a major). I do know (at fedex) if you show up with 1000hrs PIC jet vs. 1000hrs PIC t-prop, all else being the same on the resume/personality- the jet guy gets the job. At least thats what the chief pilot mentioned.
If one of the interviewers is older, ask them what their first jet was.
Anyone hired before '93 will say 737....or something thereabouts.
competitive in 1993 [SIZE=-1]≠ competitive in 2006
It would be interesting to do a survery to see what sort of time people have when hired at the majors in the last year or two.
Ie mostly turboprop background vs. jet background
applied, interviewed, and hired
Based off of percentages, ie if 100 people applied, 40 were turboprop drivers and 60 were jet.
I would like to see the percentage of people pulled for interviews, and the percentage of people hired. So if 30 out of 40 turboprop guys were interviewed and 40 out of 60 jet guys were interviewed it would be equal.
Expand that to the hiring process.
That would be a definitive answer. Otherwise we're all just guessing. One thing that does tell a tale - Continental's minimums are LESS if one has jet time vs. turboprop time. I think that says something about how they value turboprop time.
[/SIZE]
Applying to the majors- stay in the Turboprop and keep building Turbine PIC with decent schedule drive to work or go to RJ, commute, and build PIC jet time?
what say you?
So are you saying T-Prop time is not as valuable as jet time? Who do you think makes the minimums? Is it a bunch of pilots or HR pencil pushers?
Why don't you come out and jumpseat with me one day flying in and out of RKD, AUG, and BHB in January. We'll do 7 legs, fly 7.6 hours log about 6.9 hours of IMC, with 2 ILSs, 2 backcourses, 2 NDBs, and one VOR approach. All handflown, no flight director, and no autopilot because we don't have one. I guess that time isn't valuable then
Do you think that if you had 2500 of Jet PIC you would get a job at Continental if you didn't know anyone there? Being competitive doesn't mean anything.
Its who you know that will get you your next job, once you meet the minimums.
So why try to use the ONE company (with a HORRIBLE contract as far as mainline company's go) that doesn't require turbine PIC as the standard by which you'll judge what is quality time and what isn't?
I don't know where this hype about needing jet time got started.