TolgaK
PRO REC SNA!
I can tell you from commercial flying that it works pretty much the same in the civilian world. If you can't adapt to the flying style of a certain job, the company will find no use for you. If you can't learn the company way, you wont get company pay. Training standards can be just as cutthroat.
I just transferred from Juneau to Memphis within the same company. Single pilot VFR Captain to IFR First Officer (in a Caravan, ) . My role and responsibilities have been flipped upside down. For the flying in Alaska, I went from the before start flow to wheels off the ground in two minutes. Down here, it's read and response checklists, fly based on numbers instead of feel, navigate through the clouds at 8000 MSL instead of around the clouds and mountains at 500 AGL while trying to maintain at least 2 sm visibility and glide range to safe landing spots.
I haven't gone through it yet, my impression from reading this forum is military style flying is just another set of procedures and logic that have to be adapted to. It's the same as any other transition like airline to cropdusting, or instruction to banner towing. The difference is, military standards can be higher, workloads are higher and it's a straight up competition all the way through. Adaptability wins. Being the guy that says "yea, but back at XYZ we did it this way..." is a sure way of holding yourself back, just like it is in the civilian world.
I want to compare something simple since I am curious: What are the maximum altitude, heading, and speed deviations allowable in straight and level flight in both primary and advanced? The standards I've been held to were plus or minus 100ft, 10 degrees, 5 knots; though most of us can do way better.
I just transferred from Juneau to Memphis within the same company. Single pilot VFR Captain to IFR First Officer (in a Caravan, ) . My role and responsibilities have been flipped upside down. For the flying in Alaska, I went from the before start flow to wheels off the ground in two minutes. Down here, it's read and response checklists, fly based on numbers instead of feel, navigate through the clouds at 8000 MSL instead of around the clouds and mountains at 500 AGL while trying to maintain at least 2 sm visibility and glide range to safe landing spots.
I haven't gone through it yet, my impression from reading this forum is military style flying is just another set of procedures and logic that have to be adapted to. It's the same as any other transition like airline to cropdusting, or instruction to banner towing. The difference is, military standards can be higher, workloads are higher and it's a straight up competition all the way through. Adaptability wins. Being the guy that says "yea, but back at XYZ we did it this way..." is a sure way of holding yourself back, just like it is in the civilian world.
I want to compare something simple since I am curious: What are the maximum altitude, heading, and speed deviations allowable in straight and level flight in both primary and advanced? The standards I've been held to were plus or minus 100ft, 10 degrees, 5 knots; though most of us can do way better.