robertw wrote:I've been in the business since 1996. Licensed M1 since 2000, M2 since 2005. Started in my first job at $8.25 / hour, now making $70K / year. This industry has been good to me. Sure it hasn't always been fun. I've had to work graveyard shift. Sometimes the job is stressful. I had to put in time working low ($15.00 / hr as a M1 licensed engineer) wages, but like one of the other posters said, you generally get paid what you're worth. I know a guy in Ontario who is such an avionics whiz, his company pays him $85.00 / hour. They make nothing on his labour, but he is so valuable to his company and keeps the customers coming back that it's profitable to them to pay him so much. Stick with a company long enough for the management to see your skills and you will become an asset to them. Too many guys in this industry job hop and I think in the long run it really hurts them.
Specializing in component overhaul or avionics or some other discipline, really makes you worth more. If you're prepared to learn, not just turning wrenches, but learn the CAR's, for goodness sakes your company's MPM or MCM, management will take notice. This is how you work your way into QC, QA or PRM positions. Be prepared to make sacrifices too. Not everything can be measured in terms of dollars. I recently worked a Director of Maintenance position for free just for the the experience and got a flight training unit and an AMO up and running!
Everybody starts somewhere in this industry. Most likely it won't be glamorous. If you are good at what you do and it shows, there's only one way to go but up. If you're an apprentice, I agree that it's tough to find a job, but if you have to put out 1000 resumes before you get a job offer from the outfit Yellow Knife, the Pas or some other less than desireable place to live, get your foot in the door and prove to someone you can actually maintain an aircraft. Going to tech school and incurring a buch of debt to do it, doesn't entitle you a high paying job. You have to prove yourself before you're handed the big paycheque. Be honest with yourself about how much you're really worth. Not how much you believe your self to be worth, but how much value you bring to a company.
If you're jealous of other trades pay, then maybe you should go get re-trained. I know construction workers who work outside in our Canadian winters. I always have worked in (relatively warm and dry) hangers. I know plumbers who have to routinely remove masses of used tampons, fermented and rotting food, feces, small dead animals and other things in thier daily duties. I've never had to do that on an airplane or helicopter.
This is a good industry that offers a lot of possibilities to talented people. Work hard and keep learning and you will go far.
wow !
first of all, if you are making 70k/yr , as the pilot ,AME, RRM, Director of Maintenance,and candle stick maker,the first thing i would do is fire that avionic's guy that makes 176,800.00
per year and take his job.(85 dollars per hour x 2080 hrs per year = 176,800.00).
you seem to ask a lot of questions that a PRM should already know,giving the fact you have studied your companies MCM and MPM and CAR'S as stated in other posts.
ignorance is no excuse of the law!,and it sounds to me like some laws could in jeopardy here.
sounds to me like some convincing owner promised you the moon and stars and your not going to let him down.
no shortage of that in aviation,but inexperience is becoming the norm.
brv