That is not true. I will absolutely admit if I was wrong.
For the ladies out there, any of you ever get strange looks when you get in the airplane by yourself and fire it up?
That is not true. I will absolutely admit if I was wrong.
I believe some can handle it and some can't. Some would do well with 1,500 tt under their belt. Some should never.
I've never been there, don't know and nothing against you but she has been there.
I'm pretty damn certain that NOBODY with 500 hours (except maybe Wilbur) would be able to handle an Airbus. Just because she was "there" doesn't mean she knows any better than somebody who wasn't.
I flew with a few 300 hour wonders who were damn certain they were Chuck Yeager in the airplane despite the fact that they sucked. Sometimes if nobody tells you (and you have nothing, like 1000 hours of experience, to tell you otherwise) you have no idea that you suck.
The Spirit thing hits a little close to home for me. A very good friend of mine (who had about 300 hours of PIC in a Lear 60 and 2500+ TT) lives in FLL and applied to them. They turned him down and told him he interviewed well but wasn't competitive and to reapply when he had 1000 PIC. A guy he interviewed with (who had 1000 PIC) later called him to tell him the new hire class was made up of himself and 5 Riddle/UND kids (4 of them were female) all with less than 600 TT and no turbine PIC.
Needless to say she left the table...and I enjoyed my coffee and newspaper.
Sometimes it isn´t what you say, but how you say it. That is a good rule in dealing with people, and dare I say from experience women in general...
I wasn´t there so I certainly don´t know.
I'm pretty damn certain that NOBODY with 500 hours (except maybe Wilbur) would be able to handle an Airbus.
Of course.But will you admit to lyin-errr, fibbing?
you know, I want the girl to say "ok fine Alec, you are right, I was wrong..." that kind of thing.![]()
I'm pretty damn certain that NOBODY with 500 hours (except maybe Wilbur) would be able to handle an Airbus. Just because she was "there" doesn't mean she knows any better than somebody who wasn't.
I flew with a few 300 hour wonders who were damn certain they were Chuck Yeager in the airplane despite the fact that they sucked. Sometimes if nobody tells you (and you have nothing, like 1000 hours of experience, to tell you otherwise) you have no idea that you suck.
The Spirit thing hits a little close to home for me. A very good friend of mine (who had about 300 hours of PIC in a Lear 60 and 2500+ TT) lives in FLL and applied to them. They turned him down and told him he interviewed well but wasn't competitive and to reapply when he had 1000 PIC. A guy he interviewed with (who had 1000 PIC) later called him to tell him the new hire class was made up of himself and 5 Riddle/UND kids (4 of them were female) all with less than 600 TT and no turbine PIC.
BUT.....many parts of the world put 300 hour First Officers in the cockpit.
Just out of curiosity, how many hours does the average military pilot have when he/she starts piloting a jet?...Isn't it a generally accepted principle that piloting a jet requires "some" amount of experience, whether that be through CFI or flying small airplanes before graduating onto a passenger airliner?...
I'm pretty damn certain that NOBODY with 500 hours (except maybe Wilbur) would be able to handle an Airbus. Just because she was "there" doesn't mean she knows any better than somebody who wasn't.
I flew with a few 300 hour wonders who were damn certain they were Chuck Yeager in the airplane despite the fact that they sucked. Sometimes if nobody tells you (and you have nothing, like 1000 hours of experience, to tell you otherwise) you have no idea that you suck.
The Spirit thing hits a little close to home for me. A very good friend of mine (who had about 300 hours of PIC in a Lear 60 and 2500+ TT) lives in FLL and applied to them. They turned him down and told him he interviewed well but wasn't competitive and to reapply when he had 1000 PIC. A guy he interviewed with (who had 1000 PIC) later called him to tell him the new hire class was made up of himself and 5 Riddle/UND kids (4 of them were female) all with less than 600 TT and no turbine PIC.
A CFI with 1500 hours flying in a 152 in a traffic pattern is a lot more experienced than someone with 500 to fly a passenger aircraft? Lets get real, in my class there were pilots with 300 hours and 3000 hours. 4 of the hired that had over 3000 hours did not pass the sim while everyone else did.