MasterBates
Well-Known Member
A4s,
Why did you go there? PAX, Cargo, really good bar?
Why did you go there? PAX, Cargo, really good bar?
Nope. For 4-5 days with the same stews .... we're talkin' life, we're talkin' relationships, here ...A4s,
Why did you go there? PAX, Cargo, really good bar?
"Pull up the ladder; I've got mine"
I'm real curious what the pic will look like in 2011-12 timeframe.
You might have more luck guessing the winning lottery numbers than predicting that!
Plan B is get a flying job.
I can understand guys who have lost their retirement wanting to go beyond age 60 --- and while it screws up seniority, retirement calculations, and promotions for those junior, the old guys deserve it; they have put in their time, they rate it. But as for the rest, there's gotta be SOMETHING ELSE you want to do in life. I was ready to quit at 50. Probably earlier ...And they still want more.. And now they want 5 more years of theirs!
I suppose my perspective is skewed due to the difference in our type of flying or more so lack there of... I think the highest number of hours a year that I have heard is maybe 450 hours.. I would say I average 200-250 hours..
You know where the "thumb" usually goes, too ....![]()
One of my airlines used to preach .84M cruise for the Whale. But in their "defense", so did everyone else. Best cruise economics, most efficient, etc., etc., blah, blah, blah .... yes sir, three bags full...... we tend to have faster cruise speeds trading off a higher fuel burn.. Although lately we have a new incentive program where we do slower more fuel efficient speeds during the day flying....
You hit the wall @ 0.92M in the 18-wheeler. It shakes a lot.What was the critical Mach # on the Whale?
We hit it at .8M in the -45.
Just remember there are lots of flying jobs out there.. Everybody gets short sighted on the airlines..
I recommend the training command because the gouge flows and networking is easy...
"Dick" Anderson: the man is a walking, talking, penis in a business suit.
Remember this: upper management HATES YOUR GUTS.
Even former Vietnam USMC Freddie Smith of FedEx has moved away from his previous "love fest" with pilots --- "love fest" until the pilots wanted to join ALPA. The reason they wanted to organize was because Freddie was starting to shift his emphasis to the bottom line (nothing inherently wrong with that, but not at the expense of pilots when management is reaping all of the gold). Lots of considerations, lots of particulars, but remember this: if there was a way to do it without pilots; i.e., fly airplanes ..... management would ....
I had a very good friend from another airline-life (pilot) who ended up in senior management @ 3 airlines after our original employer crashed and burned. He was very successful, moved easily in the thin air of the management suites, and he confirms the disdain and disrespect from management toward pilots. As he used to put it: "it isn't about the money ... they already have more than they can spend in an ordinary lifetime ... it's about 'ego' and their place in the airline CEO 'club' ..... and they want to run the show. They hate pilots, because pilots are semi-autonomous by the nature of the job. "
He was right .....
I once had our CEO in my cockpit on the way over to Tokyo. During the (forced) pleasantries, he observed: "I don't mind paying you guys what you're worth .... I just don't like paying you TWICE what you're worth .... " :icon_lol::icon_lol::icon_lol:
I think he was waiting for laughter and applause at his wit and wisdom -- instead he only saw the backside of our heads. After a few minutes of of dead silence only broken by his attempts to re-ingratiate himself with "us" ... he quietly left the cockpit and returned to his 1st class seat.
Most of upper management today closely resembles carpetbaggers and robber barons of a time past. They move seamlessly from airline to airline. The have no center, no honor, no code, and no soul. It's all about "them" and the perceived CEO power to be derived that infects a lot of present "airline management".
The days of C.R. Smith, Robert F. Six, the Braniff Brothers, Juan Trippe and Howard Hughes ... i.e., airline pioneers and CEO's who had "something of themselves"in the airline .... are long gone .... :sleep_125