Old 05-14-2009 | 05:35 AM
  #22  
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Windsor
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From: Zee Airboos
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Originally Posted by Dashdog
I know everyone on here views this a little different, but in my opinion, getting hired at an airline with 600 hours means that you are lacking a certain type of experience. Yes he had 4000 hours, but almost all of it was in the very structured, controlled environment of the airlines. Those of us that flight instructed and or flew freight, charters, corporate ect, have had more chances to make bad decisions and scare ourselves, thus getting a deeper understanding of our own limitations and also how to recognize when the situation we're in may be evolving into an unsafe one.
That's not to say that very experienced pilots don't screw up all the time, but I don't think you can argue that his experience wasn't a possible factor in this particular accident.
Agreed. I think everyone should be forced to fly some single pilot part 135 freight. It forces you to learn how to operate an aircraft outside the 121 spoon fed flying environment. There is a difference between pilots who have flown 135 and who have "grown up" in the highly structured airline world.