Airline Pilot Central Forums

Airline Pilot Central Forums (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/)
-   American (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/american/)
-   -   American Airline Training (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/american/118094-american-airline-training.html)

Ftifsnl 11-15-2018 10:57 PM

American Airline Training
 
I just have question about training. After you get hired by American, what process do you go through before actually flying a plane?

QuagmireGiggity 11-16-2018 08:06 AM

Well.. Flight attendants only train for a month while it usually takes the pilots two months or a bit more. So the flight attendants often say... wow another month of training I could have been a pilot. :D

Basica indoc .. company stuff
Home study ground school then ground school with an instructor and your sim partner.
Couple weeks of simulator.

Name User 11-16-2018 11:24 AM

AA training is through and meets all FAA requirements. Currently done via AQP.

ShyGuy 11-16-2018 02:23 PM


Originally Posted by Name User (Post 2709552)
AA training is through and meets all FAA requirements.

https://media.giphy.com/media/XmPTMXuazazwk/giphy.gif

TankerDriver 11-20-2018 12:27 PM

Two weeks of orientation/basic indoc in Dallas learning company policies and "how to be an airline pilot at AA". There's other stuff in there like leadership training, TEM, and emergency equipment training. You'll also spend a lot of time inprocessing as an employee during indoc (email/systems access, pay, bennies, etc.).

After that (a few days after indoc), you'll do a one-day base indoc wherever you were assigned.

After that (2-4 weeks on avg.), you'll go back to Dallas (everything except E190) or go to Charlotte (E190) for aircraft training. 737's and 320's have 20-25 hrs of CBT's before you show up. E190's don't. Aircraft training (ground school/sims) last about 3-1/2 to 4 weeks.

After that, observation rides and OE. International assignments get an additional 2-3 days of international training in Dallas.

I think that's about it...

Name User 11-20-2018 01:09 PM

Just be careful guys. This looks like a media rep fishing for info.

MySaabStory 11-20-2018 01:17 PM


Originally Posted by Name User (Post 2709552)
AA training is through and meets all FAA requirements. Currently done via AQP.

Good answer. You must be an attorney.

Name User 11-20-2018 05:07 PM


Originally Posted by MySaabStory (Post 2711693)
Good answer. You must be an attorney.

I'm not but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night :D

Andrew_VT 11-20-2018 06:05 PM

This was the original posters first and only post... asking about "training before actually flying a plane."

TheRaven 11-21-2018 05:08 AM

Short answer....if you meet the extensive prerequisite experience, you already know in a broad sense what training consists of.

If you don’t know, by the time you meet the prerequisites you will.....

For everyone else, just know that the pilots at AA are thoroughly trained and evaluated before ever stepping foot in an AA cockpit


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:47 AM.


User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.
Website Copyright ©2000 - 2017 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands