GaTechKid
Well-Known Member
jonnyb said:Personal experiences, what do those matter? Unfortunately no much around here sometimes.![]()
....they do to the countless number who read but don't post.
jonnyb said:Personal experiences, what do those matter? Unfortunately no much around here sometimes.![]()
Does matter- you said so yourself.NJA_Capt said:Doesn't matter.
Asked for opinions.....we gave them
Asked for references....we gave them
Got your own references because you didn't like ours....does that make yours more right? No.
With each passing day, more low-timers are hired, as they have been for some time now. Moreover, are you giving up on your previous stance of captains not being 'groomed' enough?NJA_Capt said:How wrong you are. With each passing day, low timers become high timers. With each passing day they become more experienced.
Read again- I said 'going down' not 'run aground'. Perhaps this same mistake led to your previous misquotation?NJA_Capt said:If a more experienced Capt was on your steamship it wouldn't have run aground. Hahahahahahahahahaha. (Sorry...had to!)
:nana2:
Numbers, gentlemen, numbers! Show me with numbers that the low-timer jet pilots are unsafe. Conjecture, opinion, and anecdote simply do not stand up.
....they do to the countless number who read but don't post.![]()
Fair enough. But do you think 250 hour pilots have the experience and background to be hired as 121 crewmembers on a jet that says Continental or United on the side of it?
Where are the scary incidents that almost became an NTSB statistic, yet the captain saved it?
jonnyb, you're a good guy. Please tell me you're not buying into this nonsense!jonnyb said:You just don't get it Jim. You will though, in time.
CapnJim said:Be careful of asking for scary stories- they're almost certain to be taken for scientific proof!
jrh said:Could somebody share some examples of experienced captains "babysitting" low-time FOs? I'm interested in hearing stories of some close calls where there would have been trouble if the captain hadn't been there. I'm talking about real world, rubber meets the road, personal experiences with low-time pilots doing scary things that probably would not have happened to a more experienced pilot.
I don't know what to make of this debate. I don't have an opinion one way or the other. It seems like Jim is using too small of numbers to base his statistics on, and it seeems like the high-time captains keep making broad generalizations without offering any specific examples to back up their ideas. I can see the logic behind both sides, but I think both sides are weak.
Where are the scary incidents that almost became an NTSB statistic, yet the captain saved it?
Jim, I would word it differently. I believe that the low-time F/O is less safe, not necessarily unsafe. I don't know if there are stats to quantify "less safe", but I do know from personal experience that there is a difference between what a low-time guy can bring to the table to help a Captain when compared to someone with more experience.CapnJim said:<snip>
I suppose that's the crux of the argument- Is the disparity of competence beetween a low-time jet newhire (loosely defined as 250-500 hours) and a higher-time jet newhire (loosely defined as 1000-1500 hours) significant enough to declare the low-timer unsafe?
<snip>
The opposing data? Variations on:CapnJim said:I suppose that's the crux of the argument- Is the disparity of competence beetween a low-time jet newhire (loosely defined as 250-500 hours) and a higher-time jet newhire (loosely defined as 1000-1500 hours) significant enough to declare the low-timer unsafe? I contend that it is not. If it were, the hiring practices of regional airlines should have, even in the slightest amount, translated into a higher accident/incident rate. As best as I can distill the data, the precise opposite has been shown to be true.
NJA_Capt said:Ironically enough.........
Such personal experiences are a privilege that some people can look back on and compare. ......
This is a good illustration of how you see things the way you want to see things. Who says that "run aground" means it's sitting on a beach? In my eyes your ship hit an underwater reef and sunk. He was somewhere he shouldn't have been. Or maybe, he sank in the open ocean trying to fix something his low time FO did while he was looking the other way?CapnJim said:Read again- I said 'going down' not 'run aground'. Perhaps this same mistake led to your previous misquotation?![]()
NJA_Capt said:You were given facts (NASR) and you discounted it (cause you didn't agree)
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