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Originally Posted by GunshipGuy
(Post 1342228)
Probably jinxing this, but gotta ask: When you see a rotation you're scheduled for is now going to be an OE for another FO, what should you look for that tells you those days are available for you to white slip? Does the trip eventually disappear from your schedule when you get close enough to the date it's scheduled for?
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Originally Posted by forgot to bid
(Post 1342327)
Newk surfing?
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/...rfing--008.jpg Is it just me or does this weather system moving across the south kind of have a similar construction to the one that had all of the tornadoes in 2011? I was flying that day in and out of ATL and man, the winds were 180 at 34 knots all day. I mean 30 knots. |
Originally Posted by DLpilot
(Post 1342330)
Just enjoy the paid time off. :)
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Originally Posted by Jack Bauer
(Post 1342218)
Not to worry, in 24 months when the excess bodies have been drained from the system, all reserves (jr and sr) will be flying their tails off. Before someone comes on here and says I just have a bad attitude my response is, wait and see. The manning with new work rules and computer formula tweaking will take effect. Its a matter of time.
I hope I am wrong and Sailing will say I am but lets get feedback from the average reserve and line pilot in 24 months. It's one thing to hear a dozen reasons why you SHOULD be increasing your quality of life and quite another when you are actually living the new reality. |
Originally Posted by Vikz09
(Post 1342303)
80kts clamp. I have had this a few times in the last year and never has the LCA called to release me. The schedulers control this and they called me around 6 pm eastern. I asked why they waited and was told that the evening shift has to call in case a issue arises with the person receiving OE or consolidation, etc. it made sense to me, I figure the person replacing you may have gotten sick or not been able to make the trip. I also asked if there was anyway to find out prior to 6pm eastern because of people who commute in the night before for a early show... No luck, they held firm.
Now I will also say I am on the DC-9 and the LCA are primarily former NWA guys/gals and perhaps there is a difference with LCA calling to the scheduled FO? My experience this year and its happened three times (lucky me) no call from the LCA. As someone else mentioned, the pairing remains on your schedule and counts towrds your max p/u for the month so go to the swap board to go above the max p/u if you so desire...plus it would make someone's day for you to p/u the trip they are trying to drop! |
Originally Posted by whitt767
(Post 1342284)
Actually.... the Scheduler will call you the pm before the rotation (no call from LCA). This means all of the next day flying has already been assigned, so there is usually nothing visible to pick up. You can ws/gs, but..... only up to the max for the month. (try to use the swap board instead) The trip does not disappear, it will still be visible on your line. The gotcha is... that trip counts against your monthly hours. In Dec I got one of these and thought I was on my way to a 110 month.... false. I already had 89 hrs and couldn't pick up any WS. I did find a crappy non commutable, 2day and ended up with 100. It is still a good deal, but not the lotto ticket I thought it was.
Hard to know what's out there anyway when iCrew keeps kicking me off. Thought it was just me, but I'm hearing others are having the same problem today and yesterday. |
Originally Posted by forgot to bid
(Post 1342327)
winds were 180 at 34 knots all day. I mean 30 knots.
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Originally Posted by Jack Bauer
(Post 1342218)
Not to worry, in 24 months when the excess bodies have been drained from the system, all reserves (jr and sr) will be flying their tails off. Before someone comes on here and says I just have a bad attitude my response is, wait and see. The manning with new work rules and computer formula tweaking will take effect. Its a matter of time.
I hope I am wrong and Sailing will say I am but lets get feedback from the average reserve and line pilot in 24 months. It's one thing to hear a dozen reasons why you SHOULD be increasing your quality of life and quite another when you are actually living the new reality. Reserves can't fly their tails off all year long. The staffing formula doesn't allow it. |
Originally Posted by Denny Crane
(Post 1341705)
Easiest way is to pay $50 to Flightline and have them send you an expense report. It uses the max you can deduct for each meal without having receipts. It's also a flight log etc. I've gotten it since they started and, for $50 its soooooo worth it. They also say if you don't save at least $50 they will give you your money back.
Manually via DBMS, I have no idea. Sorry Denny Just went to the site and was wondering what they are asking for here? "Please enter your FDS access password or any EasyBid activation code." |
Originally Posted by Jack Bauer
(Post 1342218)
Not to worry, in 24 months when the excess bodies have been drained from the system, all reserves (jr and sr) will be flying their tails off. Before someone comes on here and says I just have a bad attitude my response is, wait and see. The manning with new work rules and computer formula tweaking will take effect. Its a matter of time.
I hope I am wrong and Sailing will say I am but lets get feedback from the average reserve and line pilot in 24 months. It's one thing to hear a dozen reasons why you SHOULD be increasing your quality of life and quite another when you are actually living the new reality. Jack, I think you are mostly correct. Reserves will be flying their tails off in the high volume (Summer/spring break) months, but mostly sitting on their tails during the down times. One of the main themes of our new contract was increasing the ability of the company to work the heavy months with fewer guys - this will result in what you say for the summer months but I dont think it will be too bad in the off months. Due to this it only makes sense for the company to try to push most of the training and IOEs to the off months which may increase pilot utilization somewhat in the off months. But once we start hiring and doing a lot of IOEs hopefully being on reserve for over a year will only be for the guys that want to fly reserve. Scoop |
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