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ChinookDriver47 09-15-2014 04:53 AM


Originally Posted by FSF17 (Post 1726592)
I think the best gig is the Army's flying warrant program. Get C-12s right out of the gate (I think they're doing that now), and you'll get 20 years of FLYING, hardly any of it behind a desk.


...if he can get a utilization tour right out of the gate. If not, he is just a dual rated dude who gets sent to an Air Assault unit WISHING he was doing something else.

However, I had heard this rumor, too. Any truth to it? If so, how many slots per class?

BTpilot 09-15-2014 05:42 AM

http://www.medalsofamerica.com/ItemI...Large/P877.jpg


You're welcome.

JerkStore 09-15-2014 09:38 AM


Originally Posted by Timbo (Post 1727116)
I was told Helos don't actually "fly".

They simply beat the air into submission! :eek::D

10,000 parts flying in close formation around a oil leak.

jal362 09-15-2014 06:40 PM

Coming into the home stretch with the Navy, I can honestly say...

Yeah, what all the other guys are saying. If you truly want to fly, pick the first DOD component that offers you a spot for OCS/OTS and flight school. Study you a&& off, party hard with your crew, and work your tail off for the fitness reports/OERs that lead to choice flying assignments. Once you have the hours and are current, you can either punch or decide to keep going for the long haul. Be warned though. Staying for the long haul, at least in the Navy, means flying a desk at least once or twice and promoting out of the cockpit. (gotta love the retirement check at age 42 though)

Good luck, bubba!

JJackson124 09-15-2014 07:48 PM


Originally Posted by USMCFLYR (Post 1727348)
Now that is a quite the statement.


Wow. Now that I read what I wrote (which was at about 2am and half asleep), I sounded like a total douchebag. I suppose what I meant is that in relation to quality time that easily transfers to airlines (multitude of multi-engine choices), AF has a little better selection in the "heavy" world. Sorry bout that! I owe you a beer.

Gilligan13 09-15-2014 10:10 PM

Is AD that bad? Do most want to fly for the airlines?

kme9418 09-16-2014 03:14 AM


Originally Posted by Gilligan13 (Post 1727958)
Is AD that bad? Do most want to fly for the airlines?

Yes and Yes.

Big Salt 09-16-2014 04:06 AM


Originally Posted by Gilligan13 (Post 1727958)
Is AD that bad? Do most want to fly for the airlines?

You are going to get a million opinions depending on one's background and experience. There are plenty of people who want to stay in and make rank. There are also plenty who are jaded and want to get out and go to the airlines. When you are on "airlinepilotforums" you probably are going to get most of your opinions biased to the airlines. Go hit up baseops.net or airwarriors.com to help form you decision. Plenty of quality military gouge between those two sites.

USMCFLYR 09-16-2014 04:59 AM


Originally Posted by Gilligan13 (Post 1727958)
Is AD that bad? Do most want to fly for the airlines?

Everybody has a different experience.
What I hear a lot on these boards was not my experience as a whole on active duty (thank goodness).
Do most want to go to the airlines?
I don't have statistics, but many of my peers through the years have gone to the airlines - it is certainly a transferrable skill set, but many have certainly chosen another path after military service (and then there are even those few who still want to fly - just not in the airlines ;):D)

UAL T38 Phlyer 09-16-2014 05:05 AM


Originally Posted by Big Salt (Post 1728001)
You are going to get a million opinions depending on one's background and experience. There are plenty of people who want to stay in and make rank. There are also plenty who are jaded and want to get out and go to the airlines. When you are on "airlinepilotforums" you probably are going to get most of your opinions biased to the airlines. Go hit up baseops.net or airwarriors.com to help form you decision. Plenty of quality military gouge between those two sites.

Best piece of advice I've seen on the thread.

FWIW: I flew for both; a two-year exchange with the Navy. Of my Air Force buds, roughly 1/3 stayed and made it a career; if you include the ones who went Guard or Reserve, 66%.

But I only know one guy who stayed in the Navy, active, until retirement.

And I know one guy that stayed in the Naval Reserve until retirement, and it was non-flying, for points-only. He did that because he was furloughed. When the Navy guys hit their O-5 boards, they quit, because either way, they are promoted out of the cockpit.

Both sides tend to be fiercely proud of their branch of service, and rightfully so. But the track record suggests one is more sustainable/livable than the other.

FWIW.


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