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Old 06-05-2019, 12:54 AM
  #21  
JohnBurke
Disinterested Third Party
 
Joined APC: Jun 2012
Posts: 5,926
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I've been doing ag flying since I was a kid; it was my first job after high school and I've been flying one kind of ag airplane or another for a lot of years since.

The poster above who talks about ag flying clearly hasn't done ag flying.

Most ag aircraft are turbine airplanes, most are very well maintained, given the investment in them and the fact that they're the core of the spray business. There aren't a lot of radial powered ag airplanes flying any more. I do fly them from time to time, and I enjoy them, but most ag flying is turbine flying any more; the vast majority of it in turbine S2R thrush's, Air Tractor 502's, and 802's. There are a few Bull Thrush's out there and Ag Cats, but not so many, and few Pawnees, Braves, Calairs, Ag Trucks, and other piston airplanes...it's largely a turbine game any more. For the most part, it's also not an entry level job, and whatever romance one might perceive quickly becomes work.

Aerial application is precision flying, with precision approaches to tighter tolerances than an ILS, ever 30 seconds in a field, all day long.

As for never climbing above 500', I was dropping above 10,000' not so long ago; it's a regular thing for some types of agricultural flying (and there are many, from seeding crops to fertilizing, to fighting fire to spraying drugs in foreign countries, to treating mosquitos, to drying cherries with helicopters after a rain). I've had flights of solid IMC for extended periods, and days of very VFR conditions, and everything in between.

The odds of you balling an airplane up on takeoff, abandoning it and jumping into another airplane to go right on spraying are somewhere between zero and nill. It makes a wild story, though.

Maintenance goes hot and heavy alongside the flying during the season; when it's slow during the off season, often work that can wait may get done, annuals get signed off, etc, but maintenance goes on year round.

It's not uncommon to have trucks with trailers and rolling shops full of parts that chase the airplanes and keep them running with everything from preventative maintenance to troubleshooting and repair throughout the season. Operators can't afford to have junk flying that can break and cost them revenue flying; the aircraft get maintained and sometimes run hard...but in such times the tempo of maintenance increases to keep up. It has to.
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