Originally Posted by
Bellanca
I'm a pretty low-time pilot, but have gotten the chance to sit right seat in some turbo-props and gained some invaluable experience there. Its a whole different type of experience than I've gained through instructing in the 152 that I've been instructing in. Different weather like storms, icing, and approaches down to minimums; experience dealing with busier airports and airspace; more advanced aircraft and basic CRM.
IMO (and this is probably an unpopular opinion), just having 1500 hours in mostly 152/172/PA-28's in almost or all VFR is not going to necessarily a better airline pilot. There's got to be a point where instructing experience gained in trainer aircraft somewhat plateaus and doesn't not really transfer over to making a better airline pilot. There are going to be pilots that just don't get opportunities to fly in much other than basic training aircraft, and there's got to be a point where reaching a magical number of hours in the logbook does not suddenly make them ready to haul 50 pax around in a jet. That is where better training at the airline level comes in - training in the type that the pilot will be flying.
On one hand, it is ridiculous that there have been pilots hired with 300 to 500 hours or even less- I do believe pilots in that stage of their career are still in a learning phase. On the other hand, I personally think a 800-1000 hour minimum is more reasonable than 1500 hours and an ATP.
I agree. And don't airlines in Europe have ab-initio programs where very low time pilots go through airline type training during their college studies, then go on to fly airliners with little or no issue? Not to say that experience gained through instructing is not valuable (that's the route I took) but if you have one guy with 1500 hours mostly spent teaching in a 152 and another guy with 500 hours who has gone through a four year aviation degree program and has had a curriculum covering CRM, advanced aircraft systems, high speed aerodynamics, etc. I would think that at the end of the day the 500 hour guy would be better prepared to be an airline pilot, and of course make it through airline training than the guy who did essentially the same flights a thousand times.