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Originally Posted by Cosa Nostra
(Post 2734692)
"Germanwings pilots are LH pilots.
After they are hired the LH pilots are sent to the mainline, Cargo or Germanwings. Anyway, it is by far not the best paid job in Europe, but the T&C are of course quite good." |
Originally Posted by B757
(Post 2734785)
..Good friend of mine is a A350 captain at Finnair, making over 200k / year..Been there about 30yrs..Starting pay is correct though, very low..
Fly Safe, B757 |
Originally Posted by B757
(Post 2734785)
..Good friend of mine is a A350 captain at Finnair, making over 200k / year..Been there about 30yrs..Starting pay is correct though, very low..
Fly Safe, B757 The "Mainline" top hourly wage for captains is €77.93 after 22 years with a 150hr/month guarantee, plus a bit of cheddar on top for "per diem" etc. And the new guys will never get to that grade, they are capped to lower max rate. min 10 days off per month. The European airlines are not what they were 10-20 years ago, and Norwegian is in line with the rest. |
Originally Posted by BigfatQ
(Post 2734640)
Dusseldorf - Havana 1/3/19 flight number EW 1189 or SXD 1189. You can check flight aware. Seems like flights they stopped flying SunExpress to the USA since they moved the long range ops away from Cologne. They had a flight to Seattle until September.
What Denti is saying is all correct, no need to get so upset. Lufthansa group is not much better than Norwegian. Outsourcing to save a buck. Wasn't aware that €36K is now considered legacy starting pay, when easyJet second officers earn nearly €52k starting salary right out of flightschool on the german contract. Which is not high either, but considering that they will be on the left side within 5 to 6 years at €170k it is not bad at all. |
Originally Posted by Denti
(Post 2735143)
Well, some of their A330 OPS have been moved to the contractor fake self employed brussels airline operation. However, yes, SXD is still operating all its A330s for Eurowings, some of them now out of MUC, others out of DUS. Brussels operates all of the Eurowings A340s though, same employment model as mentioned above.
Wasn't aware that €36K is now considered legacy starting pay, when easyJet second officers earn nearly €52k starting salary right out of flightschool on the german contract. Which is not high either, but considering that they will be on the left side within 5 to 6 years at €170k it is not bad at all. The majority of DY pilots come from the likes of easyjet and Ryanair. The quality of life is better according to the ones I've spoken to. Additionally, the payscales publicized on APC are only refective of the initial 3 year contract. After that pilots are transitioned to an indefinite "in house" contract. They retain their base pay up to 65 hours after which they get paid $130-$200/hr dependent on position and location. Some bases get retirement contributions and other benefits as well. |
Originally Posted by captjns
(Post 2734740)
Perhaps the anti Norwegian folks should be banging on the doors of their own airlines as well as ALPA. The 3 legacies are guilty of use it carriers from Asia, Europe, operating out of U.S. airports, out sourcing, in the name of code sharing. Passengers flying on foreign metal, lower labor and operating costs. So.... where are the objections?
One of my favorite screeens shots is... “Who’s operating my flight?:eek: You may not like Norwegian, but at least you know the airline. As an example, ORD-FRA on 10 Jan. There are 3 nonstops between LH and UA. UA flies 2 and LH flies one. If there were no codeshare, it's likely that both airlines would operate additional flights between the city pairs, driving down revenues to the point where the route would, at best, be marginally profitable. I don't know about AA or DL contracts but a section of United's pilot agreement has codeshare limitations... 1-C-3 Foreign Air Carrier Code Share Agreements Are you actually trying to suggest that only US carriers should be flying internationally if one of the city pairs is in the US? Or are you naively suggesting that codesharing be eliminated, which would cause a glut of seats flown internationally, driving down airline revenues and eventually pilot wages? |
Originally Posted by Denti
(Post 2734369)
… And yes, i have quite a few friends that followed their beloved A330 type to Sunexpress and now fly at 107k or less for them, 7 off days per month, up to 3 of them downroute.
Until europilots walk away from such ludicrous flying jobs, wages will continue to suck in euroland. Surely there are jobs with better working conditions/higher pay in euroland that don't involve flying aircraft. |
Originally Posted by BigfatQ
(Post 2734640)
Dusseldorf - Havana 1/3/19 flight number EW 1189 or SXD 1189. You can check flight aware. Seems like flights they stopped flying SunExpress to the USA since they moved the long range ops away from Cologne. They had a flight to Seattle until September.
What Denti is saying is all correct, no need to get so upset. Lufthansa group is not much better than Norwegian. Outsourcing to save a buck. |
Originally Posted by Andy
(Post 2738305)
Codeshare is a way of limiting the number of flights between city pairs to the benefit of airlines in both countries.
Are you actually trying to suggest that only US carriers should be flying internationally if one of the city pairs is in the US? Or are you naively suggesting that codesharing be eliminated, which would cause a glut of seats flown internationally, driving down airline revenues and eventually pilot wages? I do, Andy, object to putting passengers on airlines outsourced, lower cost labor, in the name of code sharing, predominantly with Aisian carriers. Increases profits for the airline... which is good... inhibits potential income for employees... which is... well you can figure the rest. |
Originally Posted by captjns
(Post 2738324)
I do, Andy, object to putting passengers on airlines outsourced, lower cost labor, in the name of code sharing, predominantly with Aisian carriers.
Increases profits for the airline... which is good... inhibits potential income for employees... which is... well you can figure the rest. No codeshare means they'd flood the market, just as Norwegian did. |
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