Jr bases at Spirit
#641
Spirit is a maturing airline. It isn't the infant ULCC anymore. For how much longer was a new hire going to be a line holding Capt in much less time than that anyway?
Hopefully the JCBA and growth and Europe expansion will all be enough to keep us moving forward. JB's upgrade times as a standalone company were trending down anyway, not up. We're all just along for the ride anyway. We can't control any of this.
Hopefully the JCBA and growth and Europe expansion will all be enough to keep us moving forward. JB's upgrade times as a standalone company were trending down anyway, not up. We're all just along for the ride anyway. We can't control any of this.
At one time the growth was such that upgrades were down under two years, but yes mathematically a 400 pilot airline doubling to 800, 1600, to now 3400 will naturally increase time to line holder captain. Retirements are low, and even without the current shortage there would have still been some attrition to legacies as there always has been. But the order book is significant and in a vacuum a NK pilot hired 4 years ago could have reasonably expected to be a junior line holding captain. We have been short captains, but the FO attrition has limited training capacity which is why they have remained at a trickle. The 319’s going away has stop-gapped things to a degree, but not for lack of demand or need for increased capacity on current routes. NEO engine woes also have an effect.
The interesting question when it comes to evaluating career expectations is how much consideration will be given to these external factors. That’s for a mediator to decide, and ultimately it will be just one of several factors involved with seniority list integration, but I think it is disingenuous to say NK is a maturing airline that is seeing a natural tapering off of upgrade potential like one would expect at Southwest or a pre-shortage legacy.
Interesting times ahead.
#642
Spirit is a maturing airline. It isn't the infant ULCC anymore. For how much longer was a new hire going to be a line holding Capt in much less time than that anyway?
Hopefully the JCBA and growth and Europe expansion will all be enough to keep us moving forward. JB's upgrade times as a standalone company were trending down anyway, not up. We're all just along for the ride anyway. We can't control any of this.
Hopefully the JCBA and growth and Europe expansion will all be enough to keep us moving forward. JB's upgrade times as a standalone company were trending down anyway, not up. We're all just along for the ride anyway. We can't control any of this.
The JCBA on the other hand…
#643
The REAL Bluedriver
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,935
Likes: 0
From: Airbus Capt
Spirit is still a growth company, which is why it doesn’t pay a dividend. Pre-Covid and pre legacies mopping up all available pilots, shareholders were expecting double digit growth. The market is there, and a combined NK and F9 would be a juggernaut, however having served under the Indigo regime I echo the sentiments of others that it’s not a management I preferred to retire under.
At one time the growth was such that upgrades were down under two years, but yes mathematically a 400 pilot airline doubling to 800, 1600, to now 3400 will naturally increase time to line holder captain. Retirements are low, and even without the current shortage there would have still been some attrition to legacies as there always has been. But the order book is significant and in a vacuum a NK pilot hired 4 years ago could have reasonably expected to be a junior line holding captain. We have been short captains, but the FO attrition has limited training capacity which is why they have remained at a trickle. The 319’s going away has stop-gapped things to a degree, but not for lack of demand or need for increased capacity on current routes. NEO engine woes also have an effect.
The interesting question when it comes to evaluating career expectations is how much consideration will be given to these external factors. That’s for a mediator to decide, and ultimately it will be just one of several factors involved with seniority list integration, but I think it is disingenuous to say NK is a maturing airline that is seeing a natural tapering off of upgrade potential like one would expect at Southwest or a pre-shortage legacy.
Interesting times ahead.
At one time the growth was such that upgrades were down under two years, but yes mathematically a 400 pilot airline doubling to 800, 1600, to now 3400 will naturally increase time to line holder captain. Retirements are low, and even without the current shortage there would have still been some attrition to legacies as there always has been. But the order book is significant and in a vacuum a NK pilot hired 4 years ago could have reasonably expected to be a junior line holding captain. We have been short captains, but the FO attrition has limited training capacity which is why they have remained at a trickle. The 319’s going away has stop-gapped things to a degree, but not for lack of demand or need for increased capacity on current routes. NEO engine woes also have an effect.
The interesting question when it comes to evaluating career expectations is how much consideration will be given to these external factors. That’s for a mediator to decide, and ultimately it will be just one of several factors involved with seniority list integration, but I think it is disingenuous to say NK is a maturing airline that is seeing a natural tapering off of upgrade potential like one would expect at Southwest or a pre-shortage legacy.
Interesting times ahead.
I said Spirit is a maturING airline. That's a fact.
And... JBLU doesn't pay a dividend either. So equal(not sure why you brought that up, almost zero domestic airlines currently pay a dividend).?
Anyway, we are all just along for this ride.
Last edited by Bluedriver; 07-09-2023 at 01:03 PM.
#644
#645
Spirit is a maturing airline. It isn't the infant ULCC anymore. For how much longer was a new hire going to be a line holding Capt in much less time than that anyway?
Hopefully the JCBA and growth and Europe expansion will all be enough to keep us moving forward. JB's upgrade times as a standalone company were trending down anyway, not up. We're all just along for the ride anyway. We can't control any of this.
Hopefully the JCBA and growth and Europe expansion will all be enough to keep us moving forward. JB's upgrade times as a standalone company were trending down anyway, not up. We're all just along for the ride anyway. We can't control any of this.
#646
The REAL Bluedriver
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,935
Likes: 0
From: Airbus Capt
All correct. I was more pointing it out, as I do in person to the many FOs I fly with that think a 3 year upgrade will still be there after the merger. And for the ones that take the first available now, that they will likely be on reserve for a lot longer than it is currently. This was not pushing a ISL agenda towards RS, more of a reality check for junior guys picking NK over DL (yes, they exist).
#647
Never enough 😂. But definitely more than NK. At least I am doing my part by being old.
#648
All correct. I was more pointing it out, as I do in person to the many FOs I fly with that think a 3 year upgrade will still be there after the merger. And for the ones that take the first available now, that they will likely be on reserve for a lot longer than it is currently. This was not pushing a ISL agenda towards RS, more of a reality check for junior guys picking NK over DL (yes, they exist).
Assuming the new B6 doesn’t stop growth in that time, and in 20 years we reach 12,000 pilots, which is a modest 200 pilot per year gain, a 25 year old new hire today will be at 33% system seniority by age 45. Not a terrible place to be with another 20 years to go.
Obviously there are massive legacy retirement numbers, but a back side of the wave 25 year old would have to run the same numbers for a legacy and find where their high water seniority mark could take them considering the thousands of younger pilots hired in recent years. It’s highly probable that at the ten to fifteen year mark they would gain substantially more relative ground at a legacy, but that could taper off quickly in the second half of their careers.
#649
New Hire
Joined: Apr 2023
Posts: 9
Likes: 0
From: Left seat
What’s upgrade times looking like at Spirit nowadays ?
QUOTE=RemoveB4flght;3662993]Spirit is still a growth company, which is why it doesn’t pay a dividend. Pre-Covid and pre legacies mopping up all available pilots, shareholders were expecting double digit growth. The market is there, and a combined NK and F9 would be a juggernaut, however having served under the Indigo regime I echo the sentiments of others that it’s not a management I preferred to retire under.
At one time the growth was such that upgrades were down under two years, but yes mathematically a 400 pilot airline doubling to 800, 1600, to now 3400 will naturally increase time to line holder captain. Retirements are low, and even without the current shortage there would have still been some attrition to legacies as there always has been. But the order book is significant and in a
vacuum a NK pilot hired 4 years ago could have reasonably expected to be a junior line holding captain. We have been short captains, but the FO attrition has limited training capacity which is why they have remained at a trickle. The 319’s going away has stop-gapped things to a degree, but not for lack of demand or need for increased capacity on current routes. NEO engine woes also have an effect.
The interesting question when it comes to evaluating career expectations is how much consideration will be given to these external factors. That’s for a mediator to decide, and ultimately it will be just one of several factors involved with seniority list integration, but I think it is disingenuous to say NK is a maturing airline that is seeing a natural tapering off of upgrade potential like one would expect at Southwest or a pre-shortage legacy.
Interesting times ahead.[/QUOTE]
QUOTE=RemoveB4flght;3662993]Spirit is still a growth company, which is why it doesn’t pay a dividend. Pre-Covid and pre legacies mopping up all available pilots, shareholders were expecting double digit growth. The market is there, and a combined NK and F9 would be a juggernaut, however having served under the Indigo regime I echo the sentiments of others that it’s not a management I preferred to retire under.
At one time the growth was such that upgrades were down under two years, but yes mathematically a 400 pilot airline doubling to 800, 1600, to now 3400 will naturally increase time to line holder captain. Retirements are low, and even without the current shortage there would have still been some attrition to legacies as there always has been. But the order book is significant and in a
vacuum a NK pilot hired 4 years ago could have reasonably expected to be a junior line holding captain. We have been short captains, but the FO attrition has limited training capacity which is why they have remained at a trickle. The 319’s going away has stop-gapped things to a degree, but not for lack of demand or need for increased capacity on current routes. NEO engine woes also have an effect.
The interesting question when it comes to evaluating career expectations is how much consideration will be given to these external factors. That’s for a mediator to decide, and ultimately it will be just one of several factors involved with seniority list integration, but I think it is disingenuous to say NK is a maturing airline that is seeing a natural tapering off of upgrade potential like one would expect at Southwest or a pre-shortage legacy.
Interesting times ahead.[/QUOTE]
#650
Line Holder
Joined: Mar 2017
Posts: 1,054
Likes: 9
From: Student of the game
What’s upgrade times looking like at Spirit nowadays ?
QUOTE=RemoveB4flght;3662993]Spirit is still a growth company, which is why it doesn’t pay a dividend. Pre-Covid and pre legacies mopping up all available pilots, shareholders were expecting double digit growth. The market is there, and a combined NK and F9 would be a juggernaut, however having served under the Indigo regime I echo the sentiments of others that it’s not a management I preferred to retire under.
At one time the growth was such that upgrades were down under two years, but yes mathematically a 400 pilot airline doubling to 800, 1600, to now 3400 will naturally increase time to line holder captain. Retirements are low, and even without the current shortage there would have still been some attrition to legacies as there always has been. But the order book is significant and in a
vacuum a NK pilot hired 4 years ago could have reasonably expected to be a junior line holding captain. We have been short captains, but the FO attrition has limited training capacity which is why they have remained at a trickle. The 319’s going away has stop-gapped things to a degree, but not for lack of demand or need for increased capacity on current routes. NEO engine woes also have an effect.
The interesting question when it comes to evaluating career expectations is how much consideration will be given to these external factors. That’s for a mediator to decide, and ultimately it will be just one of several factors involved with seniority list integration, but I think it is disingenuous to say NK is a maturing airline that is seeing a natural tapering off of upgrade potential like one would expect at Southwest or a pre-shortage legacy.
Interesting times ahead.
QUOTE=RemoveB4flght;3662993]Spirit is still a growth company, which is why it doesn’t pay a dividend. Pre-Covid and pre legacies mopping up all available pilots, shareholders were expecting double digit growth. The market is there, and a combined NK and F9 would be a juggernaut, however having served under the Indigo regime I echo the sentiments of others that it’s not a management I preferred to retire under.
At one time the growth was such that upgrades were down under two years, but yes mathematically a 400 pilot airline doubling to 800, 1600, to now 3400 will naturally increase time to line holder captain. Retirements are low, and even without the current shortage there would have still been some attrition to legacies as there always has been. But the order book is significant and in a
vacuum a NK pilot hired 4 years ago could have reasonably expected to be a junior line holding captain. We have been short captains, but the FO attrition has limited training capacity which is why they have remained at a trickle. The 319’s going away has stop-gapped things to a degree, but not for lack of demand or need for increased capacity on current routes. NEO engine woes also have an effect.
The interesting question when it comes to evaluating career expectations is how much consideration will be given to these external factors. That’s for a mediator to decide, and ultimately it will be just one of several factors involved with seniority list integration, but I think it is disingenuous to say NK is a maturing airline that is seeing a natural tapering off of upgrade potential like one would expect at Southwest or a pre-shortage legacy.
Interesting times ahead.
3 years
filler
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Breton
Hangar Talk
1
03-19-2007 02:27 PM



