Is this what it's come to?
#11
Banned
Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 44
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The regionals are a dangerous place to be learning how to fly a twin engine aircraft. I, myself got hired at a regional with 300 hours back in the 90s but we had a thorough sim evaluation and initial training was up or out attitude, no second chances..We were also required to do a turbine transition course in a beech 1900 level d sim...All before starting initial new hire training..With my whopping 300 hours I had 70 hours multi time..These minimums were for flightsafety academy interns/instructors..Normal mins for regionals were around 1200TT/200 multi and American Eagle and Business Express required 1500TT/300 multi..How times have changed..
#12
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 6,225
Likes: 61
From: B-737NG preferably in first class with a glass of champagne and caviar
Hmm... Euroland, Asia, Africa, South America. Yep... That about sums it up... 25 hours of multi and a type rating on the 737 or Airbus and off to a major carrier as a cadet. Nothing new... It's been that way for many years.
#13
The regionals are a dangerous place to be learning how to fly a twin engine aircraft. I, myself got hired at a regional with 300 hours back in the 90s but we had a thorough sim evaluation and initial training was up or out attitude, no second chances..We were also required to do a turbine transition course in a beech 1900 level d sim...All before starting initial new hire training..With my whopping 300 hours I had 70 hours multi time..These minimums were for flightsafety academy interns/instructors..Normal mins for regionals were around 1200TT/200 multi and American Eagle and Business Express required 1500TT/300 multi..How times have changed..
-2263
#15
#16
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 975
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From: Babysitter
#18
Line Holder
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 491
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Flew with lots of newhire FOs that had 200hrs when I was a brand new captain with only 1500TT in 2005. You figured out which FOs had a clue and which ones didn't relatively quickly.
But for a while it was the blind leading the blind and deaf. But we all survived it. The worst incident we had of a sub-2000hr total flight time between the two air crew was a crew that lost all their prop blades on one engine. They survived that one too and are both flying for major (AA and UAL) now.
But for a while it was the blind leading the blind and deaf. But we all survived it. The worst incident we had of a sub-2000hr total flight time between the two air crew was a crew that lost all their prop blades on one engine. They survived that one too and are both flying for major (AA and UAL) now.
#19
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 6,225
Likes: 61
From: B-737NG preferably in first class with a glass of champagne and caviar
At the end of the day it's not worth being a drama queen over this issue. If your sim partner can't perform to standard, then the new guy will be either recycled or released from training. And guess what Say Alt, same applies to you, even though have more than 25 hours of multi time.
#20
Thread Starter
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Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 1,537
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From: Downward-Facing Dog Pose
Relax man. No one is trying to be a drama queen. Please forgive me if I think putting someone with 25 hrs multi-time into a high performance jet isn't a great idea. Has it been done? Sure. Good idea? I don't think so. We're talking about Mesa, after all.


