Delta Hiring News
#5791
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 12,823
Likes: 166
From: window seat
And considering the years there was no hiring at all, its the equivalent of 3 year upgrades or less, and we will likely see it settle to that level for plug positions.
#5792
Can't abide NAI
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12,078
Likes: 15
From: Douglas Aerospace post production Flight Test & Work Around Engineering bulletin dissembler
#5793
Delta has been doing it for years also. The difference is however no other airline has the type of operation Delta does on the 757/757-300/767/767er. We have 4 different airframes with at least 10 different sub fleets. We fly the aircraft truly world wide. The only continent we miss is Australia. A new hire may find himself called out to fly a 757 to Bogata on his first trip. His return leg may be in a 757 with a different cockpit setup. The next day he might be flying a 767-300er to Amsterdam and then on to Bombay. One might be a DAL 767 and the next a former Gulfair jet. More differences. Some may have GPS and some not. When he gets back from BOM he might go to Moscow or get a see the Pacific trip to places like Saipan, Guam, Hong Kong ect. Back from that he might get a 8 day trip to Africa.
As I mentioned Delta has had many new hires on the 767. It has worked but that does not mean it's without challenges. There have been issues and the preference would be not to put new hires in that seat but if unbid the seats will get filled. Looks like at the moment 120 nre hires will be trained on the 767er.
As I mentioned Delta has had many new hires on the 767. It has worked but that does not mean it's without challenges. There have been issues and the preference would be not to put new hires in that seat but if unbid the seats will get filled. Looks like at the moment 120 nre hires will be trained on the 767er.
#5794
OK, I'll bite. I start Indoc soon and am a newly retired mil pilot. I have zero 121 (or any other civil) experience. I DO, however, have extensive experience crossing the ocean (all of them) with ACARS and CPDLC. I have flown into the busiest airports in the world and to every continent except Antartica. I find it very condescending when people assume that just because someone is a 'newhire' or a military pilot just entering the commercial world that they are somehow inept or dangerous.
It all boils down to this, we are all pilots and most of us, through good training, should be able to figure it out. Congrats on getting hired by Delta. I hope to join the ranks one day soon.
#5795
Line Holder
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 30
Likes: 0
From: M88
Delta has been doing it for years also. The difference is however no other airline has the type of operation Delta does on the 757/757-300/767/767er. We have 4 different airframes with at least 10 different sub fleets. We fly the aircraft truly world wide. The only continent we miss is Australia. A new hire may find himself called out to fly a 757 to Bogata on his first trip. His return leg may be in a 757 with a different cockpit setup. The next day he might be flying a 767-300er to Amsterdam and then on to Bombay. One might be a DAL 767 and the next a former Gulfair jet. More differences. Some may have GPS and some not. When he gets back from BOM he might go to Moscow or get a see the Pacific trip to places like Saipan, Guam, Hong Kong ect. Back from that he might get a 8 day trip to Africa.
As I mentioned Delta has had many new hires on the 767. It has worked but that does not mean it's without challenges. There have been issues and the preference would be not to put new hires in that seat but if unbid the seats will get filled. Looks like at the moment 120 nre hires will be trained on the 767er.
As I mentioned Delta has had many new hires on the 767. It has worked but that does not mean it's without challenges. There have been issues and the preference would be not to put new hires in that seat but if unbid the seats will get filled. Looks like at the moment 120 nre hires will be trained on the 767er.
#5796
OK, I'll bite. I start Indoc soon and am a newly retired mil pilot. I have zero 121 (or any other civil) experience. I DO, however, have extensive experience crossing the ocean (all of them) with ACARS and CPDLC. I have flown into the busiest airports in the world and to every continent except Antartica. I find it very condescending when people assume that just because someone is a 'newhire' or a military pilot just entering the commercial world that they are somehow inept or dangerous.
Delta might have the most mature screening and training program in the world. Anyone who makes it to the line is qualified to do the job. New hires to the ER is no less safe than new hires to the MD-88 no matter where they came from.
#5797
Moderator
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 7,252
Likes: 95
From: DAL 330
I was hired directly to ER, displaced twice to the 737 then the 88. The easiest job by far was flying the ER. We as pilots don't like to think that we are at all indispensable but the truth is that to a degree we are. There is a reason the ER is senior and it's not the pay. New hires at Delta are highly qualified and experienced pilots who are very capable of doing that job.
Concur 100%. Either way the new-hire is going to have a steep learning curve. In my humble opinion, the ER presents a much more "Gentlemen" like learning pace, with one 9+ hour leg/day with an extra FO, than up and down the east coast 4-5 times per day with no time to discuss much besides the next "slam-dunk" arrival.
Both airframes have unique challenges and I am very confident that upwards of 95% of our new-hires have minimal trouble with either.
Scoop
#5798
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 5,231
Likes: 65
OK, I'll bite. I start Indoc soon and am a newly retired mil pilot. I have zero 121 (or any other civil) experience. I DO, however, have extensive experience crossing the ocean (all of them) with ACARS and CPDLC. I have flown into the busiest airports in the world and to every continent except Antartica. I find it very condescending when people assume that just because someone is a 'newhire' or a military pilot just entering the commercial world that they are somehow inept or dangerous.
And according to some of the other posts, the guys that would be the most screwed in the single seat/tactical jet guy
. Let's see, random thoughts on one's first crossing of IOE. You know, just to conform with the overall crappy vector the thread has taken;
"dude, what are these guys doing in this giant cockpit with me? Even more, who the heck are all those people behind that door?. Oh well, I get to have face to face interaction with my coworkers and eat/poop/pee when I want"
"where the heck is my wingman?"
"where's my HOTAS, I can't figure this out"
"I feel kinda naked flying without my g-suit on"
"Crap!!! where are the tankers to drag me across the Atlantic!!!!! We're gonna get lost!!!!!!. May day may day!!!! EJECT EJECT EJECT!!!!!!!!"
(god, I pity those that DON'T have the capacity to understand sarcastic/facetious intent).
Anyway, 80kts/BuckingBar/ACL65 were hired into the heavy equipment IIRC. And even if not, they advanced quickly before the downward slide in the recession. Granted, they're sharp dudes. And there were pilots of other backgrounds that were able to do the SAME. Nothing new here, nothing earth shattering or dangerous.
I was hired directly to ER, displaced twice to the 737 then the 88. The easiest job by far was flying the ER. We as pilots don't like to think that we are at all indispensable but the truth is that to a degree we are. There is a reason the ER is senior and it's not the pay. New hires at Delta are highly qualified and experienced pilots who are very capable of doing that job.
There is less new stuff for 121 guys to learn so the transition is probably a little easier but military guys generally have the aptitude to get up to speed quickly. After a few months you'd be hard pressed to tell what someone's background is.
Delta might have the most mature screening and training program in the world. Anyone who makes it to the line is qualified to do the job. New hires to the ER is no less safe than new hires to the MD-88 no matter where they came from.
Delta might have the most mature screening and training program in the world. Anyone who makes it to the line is qualified to do the job. New hires to the ER is no less safe than new hires to the MD-88 no matter where they came from.
Concur 100%. Either way the new-hire is going to have a steep learning curve. In my humble opinion, the ER presents a much more "Gentlemen" like learning pace, with one 9+ hour leg/day with an extra FO, than up and down the east coast 4-5 times per day with no time to discuss much besides the next "slam-dunk" arrival.
Both airframes have unique challenges and I am very confident that upwards of 95% of our new-hires have minimal trouble with either.
Scoop
Both airframes have unique challenges and I am very confident that upwards of 95% of our new-hires have minimal trouble with either.
Scoop

#5799
OK, I'll bite. I start Indoc soon and am a newly retired mil pilot. I have zero 121 (or any other civil) experience. I DO, however, have extensive experience crossing the ocean (all of them) with ACARS and CPDLC. I have flown into the busiest airports in the world and to every continent except Antartica. I find it very condescending when people assume that just because someone is a 'newhire' or a military pilot just entering the commercial world that they are somehow inept or dangerous.
It would be unwise not to expect just that.
Good luck and welcome aboard!!
#5800
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 1,414
Likes: 0
From: Heavies
Just a little under half of my time is in fighters. The rest is a mixture AF student time, 141 flight instruction and regional time. I think that being mil AND a regional guy was a big help.
Crewdawg,
That is why I as the question. On this very thread you keep hearing about how they score your application then those that have the high score, whatever that is, get the call for an interview. With the creds you listed it doesn't jive with getting an interview at such a low amount of flight time.
I understand how people get to explain it to the interviewers, once they get the call. The question is how are they getting the call.
That is why I as the question. On this very thread you keep hearing about how they score your application then those that have the high score, whatever that is, get the call for an interview. With the creds you listed it doesn't jive with getting an interview at such a low amount of flight time.
I understand how people get to explain it to the interviewers, once they get the call. The question is how are they getting the call.
Which brings me back to how is it that some people seem to need a PhD, 10,000 hours shuttle time a letter of rec from the president and still don't score enough to get a call, however suspended license, 2,000 hours and a gpa outside of the range that people in the know here say won't get you looked at and gets the call early on. Good for him, yes... However it makes some us wonder what is going on.
They only people I know at Delta are a few F.O.s who are your average line guys. Not an intern.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post



