Sun Air?
#1
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Oct 2006
Posts: 650
Sun Air?
Anyone work for these folks? I keep seeing their add on the orange site. Left seat is $50K a year and $45/hour over your 65 guarantee to fly a 208 or PA31. That is a lot of money to fly either of those.
#3
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Oct 2006
Posts: 650
I agree and it is $50K plus. I am sure there is down side to the company as with any of them but that is very good money for the left seat of a PA31 or a 208. No pay during training and it looks like you pay for your own place to stay so there is a red flag right off. But if you gut it out till you are on the line.....
Plus you would be building time toward the 1000135/121/91 rule if I am not mistaken unless PIC doesn't count as SIC under that rule.
Plus you would be building time toward the 1000135/121/91 rule if I am not mistaken unless PIC doesn't count as SIC under that rule.
#4
Sun Air Express' passenger bookings are handled by Pacific Wings and their flight listings in travel reservation systems are under Pacific Wings' IATA code, LW.
Anything to do with PW should be a warning.
Anything to do with PW should be a warning.
Last edited by ChinookDriver47; 02-19-2015 at 11:42 AM.
#7
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Oct 2006
Posts: 650
Just a quick browse of this board shows that nearly all regionals are "bottom feeders" so why not go for the one that pays 3 times as much first year and puts you in the left seat rather than the right? The real downfall I see is that it is a piston twin or a turbine single but Cape Air pilots have had no trouble moving on I am sure. I am not planning to leave where I am anytime in the near future I was just trying to get some info on a company that is paying so much for the equipment they are flying.
Now if you had to go in as an SIC that is a completely different story.
Now if you had to go in as an SIC that is a completely different story.
#8
Just a quick browse of this board shows that nearly all regionals are "bottom feeders" so why not go for the one that pays 3 times as much first year and puts you in the left seat rather than the right? The real downfall I see is that it is a piston twin or a turbine single but Cape Air pilots have had no trouble moving on I am sure. I am not planning to leave where I am anytime in the near future I was just trying to get some info on a company that is paying so much for the equipment they are flying.
Now if you had to go in as an SIC that is a completely different story.
Now if you had to go in as an SIC that is a completely different story.
And as far as Cape Air, they have an agreement with Jet Blue (I think) so thats a bit different. I challenge you to find more than a COUPLE of pilots who have gone from flying multi pistons to the right seat of a boeing or airbus. Keep dreaming!
#9
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Oct 2006
Posts: 650
I would venture to say that there are WAAAY more than a just a few ex piston twin guys, whether from Cape Air or one of several piston freight operators that went straight to something other than another regional without any turbine PIC.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post