Which came first - flying or wrenching?
Which do you prefer?
Has it helped your career?
Any regrets?
It's mostly just idle curiosity at this point, but I am considering AME school. I'm a lowtime pilot (224 hours, all Robinson) currently looking for my next gig, but - like most low timers - it's not an easy row to hoe, especially as helicopter companies seem to be facing ever-increasing minimum hour requirements. The jobs that used to call for 250 and 500 hour minimums seem to be inflating to at least 1000, and the only way to get there is by picking up maintenance and ferry flights. I'm fine with that and I'm not in a rush to fill up my logbook, and I know I'll be spending time on the ground to get there - but if I was an apprentice, then maybe some of that ground time could go towards my AME license. If I got the odd flight in there to stay current and trained on the pilot side, so much the better.
I've always been mechanically inclined (I work on my own vehicles/bikes, and I build my own guitar amplifiers), and I like troubleshooting stuff and problem solving. BUT truth be told I like flying the most, and the AME career would be a means to open up more flying job opportunities, and to be more employable/useful when things are slow. I think having a better mechanical understanding of the machines would be beneficial, too.
Thoughts?
Cheers,
Darren
FWIW, I did read the stickies in the maintenance forum
