...and little "love", either. Bummer. Hard times for the guys @ ALOHA:
ALOHA AIRLINES FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY A SECOND TIME
ALOHA AIRLINES FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY A SECOND TIME
I regularly fly Mesa, and I know a lot of their pilots come from the ASU aircraft degree.As long as GO pilots keep falling asleep at the wheel, it may be a self correcting issue.
Nothing like bottom feeders working for penny wages, destroying the profession. Damn Mesa pukes.
Civilian training is not the same as military training. The 250 hour civilian pilot does not have the experience to be flying pax.
I regularly fly Mesa, and I know a lot of their pilots come from the ASU aircraft degree.
Sorry to threadjack, but should I be concerned?
250-300 hour FOs. But it's a two-man crew and the Captain shouldn't have to be babysitting. Teaching the new guy and helping him gain knowledge/experience is one thing. Flight instructing is entirely different altogether.
I flew with 250 hour FOs in the Twin Otter at Scenic. It was acceptable there as the Otter is really a single pilot aircraft and only had an FO because of FARs. Plus it is not what I'd call a high performance airplane. I cringe at the thought of some of these guys going into a 50 pax jet with the time/experience they had when they came to Scenic.
This has been a longstanding problem in civil airline cockpits ... i.e., newspapers, magazines, cassette players (old school? ), and now, the ubiquitous iPod inflight ... it would seem that some cannot go from point "A" to "B" without an assist to overcome the mind-numbing routine of hours of flying, punctuated by a few minutes of stark terror (you've all heard that old saw, I am certain).I heard that .... there have been issues w/ maturity not just skillz (i.e. pulling out an iPod in the cockpit)....
I think it's called attitude. A proper attitude.Which begs the question... what the hell is a probate FO doing breaking out an iPod in flight? ...The downward spiral of the profession continues...