Amerijet 767/757 ACMI hiring 1500 F/O
#1
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Joined: Dec 2022
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I’m just curious how many regional guys would leave to a ACMI to fly a 767/757 and soon 777 at Amerijet with the new contract. It looks like 100k guaranteed and 138k second year F/O. Zero upgrade time so once you meet requirements you’re in the left seat.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
#2
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Joined: Sep 2022
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I’m just curious how many regional guys would leave to a ACMI to fly a 767/757 and soon 777 at Amerijet with the new contract. It looks like 100k guaranteed and 138k second year F/O. Zero upgrade time so once you meet requirements you’re in the left seat.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
#3
I’m just curious how many regional guys would leave to a ACMI to fly a 767/757 and soon 777 at Amerijet with the new contract. It looks like 100k guaranteed and 138k second year F/O. Zero upgrade time so once you meet requirements you’re in the left seat.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
#4
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Joined: Sep 2017
Posts: 300
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From: On the Line
I’m just curious how many regional guys would leave to a ACMI to fly a 767/757 and soon 777 at Amerijet with the new contract. It looks like 100k guaranteed and 138k second year F/O. Zero upgrade time so once you meet requirements you’re in the left seat.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
#6
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 44,857
Likes: 658
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
ACMI is a special lifestyle, if that's your gig you can make decent money down the road.
But in this climate there's no need for that sort of detour if your goal is top-tier pax airlines. Regional or LCC is the path of least resistance.
Alternatively if you're young, single, and adventurous then ACMI might be an interesting experience and with fast upgrade would probably offer the same time building as a regional. Make sure you know what the annual block hours will be though. Definitely good on the resume if FDX/UPS is your goal.
But in this climate there's no need for that sort of detour if your goal is top-tier pax airlines. Regional or LCC is the path of least resistance.
Alternatively if you're young, single, and adventurous then ACMI might be an interesting experience and with fast upgrade would probably offer the same time building as a regional. Make sure you know what the annual block hours will be though. Definitely good on the resume if FDX/UPS is your goal.
#7
I’m just curious how many regional guys would leave to a ACMI to fly a 767/757 and soon 777 at Amerijet with the new contract. It looks like 100k guaranteed and 138k second year F/O. Zero upgrade time so once you meet requirements you’re in the left seat.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
This is without and bonus money or per diem calculated into it.
#8
I'm proud to be a former freight dog and have lived that life for several years. However, I'll never go back no matter the equipment or pay (unless I'm forced to for some reason such as a furlough). Typically, it's a stepping-stone opportunity, not a long-term plan. Unless someone finds the extended days off an acceptable reward for the price of long weeks gone, there are plenty of opportunities elsewhere which provide better sleep habits.
#10
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Joined: Nov 2021
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I'll bite. I just had this whole argument with myself to leave my regional for a CJO with ABX and I decided to stay at my regional. Here was my thought process:
On the pro-regional side, the regional offered way more flight time because once you're off reserve you can fly 75-95 hours a month, which would probably get a call from a legacy faster. ABX was a bunch of CVG-SMF and then sit for 2 days type stuff. With the pay and bonus structure (and considering the fact that at ABX it would take 3 years to hit 1000 hours to be upgrade eligible), I would make 50k MORE at my regional over a 3 year period. Sure, the top of the payscale at the ACMI is better than my regional, but I'm not really hoping to stay at either long enough for it to matter. At my regional, I get to fly the front side of the clock and I have a good commute while ABX is back side of the clock with a two-leg to CVG. I would love to get hired by a legacy that is different from the mainline my regional flies for now so I feel that I'm marginally more attractive to my dream airline staying put. The cargo market seems to be under a bit of a crunch now and ABX just lost most of their trans-Atlantic flying. Though the LONG TERM stability of ABX is probably better than my regional, I seems that cargo is pretty slow right now while the regionals should keep squeezing as much life out of their dying airframe as their captain numbers allow. Things aren't as good as they could be, but hopefully there are enough lifers, E-3s, flow die-hards, and people who have made oopsies to keep the left seat full enough to accommodate my seniority. I would rather upgrade to captain than go to an LCC due to lack of single-leg commute options at LCCs and desire to cut out intermediate steps and im sure ill have no time flying as much as I want as a regional captain. Furthermore, if I were to do anything really stupid down the line or something economy-crushing were to slow major airline hiring, I could still *hopefully* flow to my mainline eventually. Lastly, my pass riders really loves to nonrev. My parents live 20 minutes from my mainline's major European hub and are going to Italy tomorrow, my girlfriend is going to Australia next week, and my enrolled friend is going to Portugal some time in June.
On the pro-ABX side, ABX has the 767 which is a cool type rating.
Everybody's situation is different, but for me in particular, the ACMI route seemed like a step backwards
On the pro-regional side, the regional offered way more flight time because once you're off reserve you can fly 75-95 hours a month, which would probably get a call from a legacy faster. ABX was a bunch of CVG-SMF and then sit for 2 days type stuff. With the pay and bonus structure (and considering the fact that at ABX it would take 3 years to hit 1000 hours to be upgrade eligible), I would make 50k MORE at my regional over a 3 year period. Sure, the top of the payscale at the ACMI is better than my regional, but I'm not really hoping to stay at either long enough for it to matter. At my regional, I get to fly the front side of the clock and I have a good commute while ABX is back side of the clock with a two-leg to CVG. I would love to get hired by a legacy that is different from the mainline my regional flies for now so I feel that I'm marginally more attractive to my dream airline staying put. The cargo market seems to be under a bit of a crunch now and ABX just lost most of their trans-Atlantic flying. Though the LONG TERM stability of ABX is probably better than my regional, I seems that cargo is pretty slow right now while the regionals should keep squeezing as much life out of their dying airframe as their captain numbers allow. Things aren't as good as they could be, but hopefully there are enough lifers, E-3s, flow die-hards, and people who have made oopsies to keep the left seat full enough to accommodate my seniority. I would rather upgrade to captain than go to an LCC due to lack of single-leg commute options at LCCs and desire to cut out intermediate steps and im sure ill have no time flying as much as I want as a regional captain. Furthermore, if I were to do anything really stupid down the line or something economy-crushing were to slow major airline hiring, I could still *hopefully* flow to my mainline eventually. Lastly, my pass riders really loves to nonrev. My parents live 20 minutes from my mainline's major European hub and are going to Italy tomorrow, my girlfriend is going to Australia next week, and my enrolled friend is going to Portugal some time in June.
On the pro-ABX side, ABX has the 767 which is a cool type rating.
Everybody's situation is different, but for me in particular, the ACMI route seemed like a step backwards
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