• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

The SHOW: Airlines still a "good gig"??

Griz882

Frightening children with the Griz-O-Copter!
pilot
Contributor
I would have been wrong! That is a nice looking Waffle House. I’m used to more wall stains and bug life.
 

Skywalker

Locked ready viz
pilot
Looks like the Navy isn’t the only place where “flight school is backed up”!

A lot of 141 schools seem to have this problem, or worse the students signed on the written all-but-promise of a CFI job and got a giant shrug when they finished training. I know a number of ATP victims who started their training before I joined the Navy... several of them still don't have a flying job of any kind, nevermind airlines or freight.
 

ChuckMK23

Standing by for the RIF !
pilot
A lot of 141 schools seem to have this problem, or worse the students signed on the written all-but-promise of a CFI job and got a giant shrug when they finished training. I know a number of ATP victims who started their training before I joined the Navy... several of them still don't have a flying job of any kind, nevermind airlines or freight.
As a Part 61 CFI, I've successfully trained many what I call Part 141 Refugees. Folks who often by no fault of their own could not stay within the narrowly defined training footprint of a 141 school and we're just getting bled dry financially. I got pretty good at picking up the pieces and getting aspiring pilots through private commercial instrument and multi-engine. All these folks are happily flying professionally today.
In my experience, the typical successful part 141 student is living at home in a two-parent household with Mom and Dad paying the bills for everything and the student has little stress or no stress outside of school and training. Genuinely, the first time this young person stops living at home is when they get their first job at a regional.
 
Last edited:

sevenhelmet

Quaint ideas from yesteryear
pilot
As a Part 61 CFI, I've successfully trained many what I call Part 141 Refugees. Folks who often by no fault of their own could not stay within the narrowly defined training footprint of a 141 school and we're just getting bled dry financially. I got pretty good at picking up the pieces and getting aspiring pilots through private commercial instrument and multi-engine. All these folks are happily flying professionally today.
In my experience, the typical successful part 141 student is living at home in a two-parent household with Mom and Dad paying the bills for everything and the student has little stress or no stress outside of school and training. Genuinely, the first time this young person stops living at home is when they get their first job at a regional.

I'm finishing up an instrument student right now who falls into that category. He made the smart decision to stop training when it became obvious it was a bleed-ex, and the schedule was going to be whatever was convenient for the school/instructor, not for him. Now I'm helping him finish up instrument training under Part 61, and he's a lot happier.

For-profit Part 141 schools have their drawbacks... know what you're getting into.
 

MIDNJAC

is clara ship
pilot
The Show is a much better place to be (and I hope all have a seat there or another funded civilian career) than the USNR as of a couple months ago. Don't know how other parts are doing, but TSW funding is eye watering. Keep a lookout at all our bases for our lemonade stands soon. Holy fuck
 

Gatordev

Well-Known Member
pilot
Site Admin
Contributor
Last month while I was waiting to do my medical, I was chatting with a CFI/Part 135/Cirrus Training center pilot and he was telling me about their operation. They were about to get their Part 141 cert, but when he said it, he said, "...but we don't want to be known as a 141 school. We're just doing it for the VA and other scholarships." I knew what he meant and it shows how bad a rep the 141 schools have amassed.

He also mentioned they have an Epic and he was really impressed with it. Unfortunately they still don't have it on their 135 certificate to be able to charter it.....after over a year.
 

sevenhelmet

Quaint ideas from yesteryear
pilot
Last month while I was waiting to do my medical, I was chatting with a CFI/Part 135/Cirrus Training center pilot and he was telling me about their operation. They were about to get their Part 141 cert, but when he said it, he said, "...but we don't want to be known as a 141 school. We're just doing it for the VA and other scholarships." I knew what he meant and it shows how bad a rep the 141 schools have amassed.

He also mentioned they have an Epic and he was really impressed with it. Unfortunately they still don't have it on their 135 certificate to be able to charter it.....after over a year.

In my opinion, schools like ATP have really given Part 141 a bad name. Our employee's flying club where I work has a Part 141 certificate, and we train a lot of employees on a wide variety of timelines, generally determined by the student. We also do Part 61 for select folks on a case-by-case basis, but there is none of the "big promises, delivery... meh" that you get from the "big name" guys that advertise on LinkedIn.
 
Top