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Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 4:35 am
by DAVE THE RAVE
iflyforpie wrote:To me, the 737 from instructor seems like going from first gear to fifth whereas the humble Navajo would be more like snatching second and then third (King Air).

On a 737 you are going to be bogged down with inexperience and possibly debt that an upgrade will be very far away. You will probably find that those who got some MPIC on a Ho and then some turbine time in a King Air will be at a larger (and probably more local and reputable) carrier in no time and perhaps even making captain sooner.
Are you speaking from experience? I went from instructing on 150/172s with a TT of 2000 hours to the right seat of a A319. (reputable UK airline). Got my up grade in 2 years with 3700 hours. We recruit guys/gals through integrated programs with as little as 140 hours TT. They get on with the job fine.

It's comments like the ones riffed throughout these threads which makes me thankful everyday I left Canada. For some reason, North America has been a refuge for the "you need 4000 hours to touch a jet" brigade.

It's a totally different world out there, and quite refreshing when you leave Canada. I fly with 20-21 year olds all the time.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 7:35 am
by CAL
the 37 is alot easier to fly than a navajo.....its important to listen to all these guys but in the end its about $$ regardless of what anyone says....you ultimately need to pay your bills and someday retire. The quicker you get on that jet the quicker you make more money...especially overseas...down side its not Canada.

How did you get an offer to fly a 37 from instructing? either way go fly the 737...your less likely to die.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 8:38 am
by iflyforpie
DAVE THE RAVE wrote:I went from instructing on 150/172s with a TT of 2000 hours to the right seat of a A319. (reputable UK airline). Got my up grade in 2 years with 3700 hours. We recruit guys/gals through integrated programs with as little as 140 hours TT. They get on with the job fine.

It's comments like the ones riffed throughout these threads which makes me thankful everyday I left Canada. For some reason, North America has been a refuge for the "you need 4000 hours to touch a jet" brigade.

It's a totally different world out there, and quite refreshing when you leave Canada. I fly with 20-21 year olds all the time.
Maybe it worked for you. That's great. It doesn't work out for the majority though. And I know of guys who got on young with WestJet and Skyservice (RIP) here in Canada and timed expansion right so they got captains seats in no time. Carriers with quick upgrades are often more volatile though, so it becomes more of a gamble.

If you never want to come back to Canada, for sure, go expat. But guys who go expat and then get sick of it wind up coming back and being 5-10 years behind everybody else because it works on seniority and not hours.

Which carrier do you work for if you don't mind me asking?

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 1:54 pm
by Doc
CAL wrote:
How did you get an offer to fly a 37 from instructing? either way go fly the 737...your less likely to die.

Sad state of the industry is, this is probably a true statement!

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 7:53 pm
by STOLskunkworks
If you mean a 737 200 then hell I would go do it just for the sound they make.

Like a Harley of the sky...... Just sounds like victory and Napalm in the Morning all rolled into one thrust producing noise making flame spitting beast.

Of course if you are talking the newer high bypass modern 37 well f it go for the ho / king air you will have more fun. 8)

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 9:09 pm
by Panama Jack
Given your stated career objectives, the amount of debate seems surprising to me. I see it as a no-brainer. Go with the 737 job in Indonesia. Keep your eyes open though as the Indonesia is the Northern Bush operation equivalent of what we have in Canada; low pay, sometimes questionable characters, SOP's and Standards. No different, than flying your King Air or Navajo BUT you are getting some good quality flight time and living in an interesting place where you will enjoy a superior standard of living.

wallypilot wrote:
tbaylx wrote: Once you leave canada it can be awfully hard to get back in.
+1

This is especially true when talking about airline flying. Once you leave, it will be very hard to come back years later, not necessarily becase it's hard to find a job, but more because you personally won't want to take the pay cut to come back to Canada.
True. It is hard to go back to Kraft Dinner with a side of bullshit after you have seen the light and experienced a good standard of living. You might even question whether returning to Canada is really what you want to do. Canada is so much nicer when you have summer vacation from your overseas job and are enjoying yourself with disposable income rather than "at home" but can't go anywhere because you are on Reserve or flying because the guys 15 years senior to you all bid for summer vacation.

Even if you do get sick of nasi goreng after a few years, or the other options out there, and decide that Kraft Dinner isn't so bad, given the quantity and quality of time you will log you should be able to get in through the door of a Canadian airline before the guy who went Navajo or King Air, so then you've got your seniority number and can hope the airline never goes Tango Uniform.

P.S. and yes, a "classic" is a -3/4/500 or, in TC parlance, a B73B

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 9:55 pm
by Diadem
CAL wrote:either way go fly the 737...your less likely to die.
Not in Indonesia...

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Wed Apr 18, 2012 7:03 am
by Joe Blow Schmo
tbaylx wrote:Once you leave canada it can be awfully hard to get back in.
Yeah. Usually because you can't imagine returning to the low pay, high taxes, and relatively boring life.

Take the 737 job! Since you haven't named the airline, my only caveat would be to do some research and make sure it is legit and not just some scam to get our TR money. If you really want to come back to Canada, 2 years and 1500-2000 hours of 737 time later, you'll be pretty attractive to Westjet. However if you want to stay overseas you can go to the middle east pretty quickly or get your 737 command and enter the contract world.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 1:50 am
by Panama Jack
+1
Joe Blow Schmo wrote: Yeah. Usually because you can't imagine returning to the low pay, high taxes, and relatively boring life.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 7:50 am
by Cat Driver
Never mind the low pay high taxes the greatest fear you should have is dying while you wait for medical treatment if you get a serious disease such as cancer.......for medical treatment you are better off in the third world.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 11:43 am
by dazednconfused
Joe Blow Schmo wrote:
tbaylx wrote:Once you leave canada it can be awfully hard to get back in.
Yeah. Usually because you can't imagine returning to the low pay, high taxes, and relatively boring life.

Take the 737 job! .... If you really want to come back to Canada, 2 years and 1500-2000 hours of 737 time later, you'll be pretty attractive to Westjet. However if you want to stay overseas you can go to the middle east pretty quickly or get your 737 command and enter the contract world.

Couple questions here.

1. Would Westjet/AC/Porter/Jazz/even top tier 704 etc respect time you acquired in Indonesia (737 or turboprop)? Say going from very low time piston pilot to 2000 hrs of 737 SIC with Garuda or LionAir. Id think this raises the eyebrows (in a negative way) of some hiring panels or chief pilots here. I could be wrong.

2. Does anyone know, first hand, of someone who has gone to Indonesia with low time, built experience and then moved on to more respectable operations, say in the Middle East? Otherwise a person could be stuck there for a long time - until a local takes your job.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 1:04 pm
by DAVE THE RAVE
iflyforpie wrote: Which carrier do you work for if you don't mind me asking?
EasyJet

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Fri Apr 20, 2012 5:45 pm
by Colonel Sanders
On a 737 you are going to be bogged down with inexperience
Maybe, but ... don't they put kids with 300 hrs in the right seat of Boeings
and Airbuses in Europe?

I went straight from piston-prop to pure jet with no problem. Never flown
a turbo-prop. The jet that I fly now is far easier to fly than the C421B.

Despite what you might get told here, you don't have to be a rocket scientist
to fly a jet.
going from very low time piston pilot to 2000 hrs of 737 SIC
I might humbly suggest that you get your ATPL (or be within reasonable
distance of it) when you make that jump. You don't want to be short
on the experience requirement (eg night pic x/c) down the road.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 6:39 am
by Joe Blow Schmo
dazednconfused wrote:
Joe Blow Schmo wrote:
tbaylx wrote:Once you leave canada it can be awfully hard to get back in.
Yeah. Usually because you can't imagine returning to the low pay, high taxes, and relatively boring life.

Take the 737 job! .... If you really want to come back to Canada, 2 years and 1500-2000 hours of 737 time later, you'll be pretty attractive to Westjet. However if you want to stay overseas you can go to the middle east pretty quickly or get your 737 command and enter the contract world.

Couple questions here.

1. Would Westjet/AC/Porter/Jazz/even top tier 704 etc respect time you acquired in Indonesia (737 or turboprop)? Say going from very low time piston pilot to 2000 hrs of 737 SIC with Garuda or LionAir. Id think this raises the eyebrows (in a negative way) of some hiring panels or chief pilots here. I could be wrong.
I guess that depends on the attitudes of the people doing the hiring. Ask this question on the Westjet forum and maybe Dave P will answer it for you. I can't imagine why it would matter. Flying around Indo would be a similar experience to working in the bush in Canada. You'd just be in a bigger plane.
2. Does anyone know, first hand, of someone who has gone to Indonesia with low time, built experience and then moved on to more respectable operations, say in the Middle East? Otherwise a person could be stuck there for a long time - until a local takes your job.
I work for a "more respectable operation" and we have pilots from all over the world with every background imaginable. The 737 time would probably get you an interview. The rest is up to you. Certainly the 737 time will be more valued to an overseas airline than Canadian bush experience. Personally I think my bush experience was invaluable, however most recruiters in the rest of the world would rather have a guy with 2000 hours, 1800 of which are on 737 than a guy with 5000 hours of piston or TP time.

Though if this Indo airline offers upgrades in a reasonable amount of time I would be tempted to stay and get a couple thousand hours PIC on the 737. Then you'll have plenty of opportunities all over Asia and really won't need to worry about work for a very long time.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 7:12 am
by Doc
dazednconfused wrote:
1. Would Westjet/AC/Porter/Jazz/even top tier 704 etc respect time you acquired in Indonesia (737 or turboprop)? Say going from very low time piston pilot to 2000 hrs of 737 SIC with Garuda or LionAir. Id think this raises the eyebrows (in a negative way) of some hiring panels or chief pilots here. I could be wrong.
Interesting thread. The ebb and flow. Back and forth. Take the 73. Take the Navajo.
Me? I'd go fly the 73.

As for the above question. What would be the down side of picking up a pilot with 2000 hours of 73 time? No brainer from my point of view. If the guy isn't working out, it'll show up in training. If he does, you've gained an experienced member for the team.

I like Joe Blow Schmo's point as well. Stay and get a few hours of PIC in the puppy. You could be sitting in the cat bird seat in four years....vs......still flying in and out of BU& FU*K AB in a HO!??

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 7:19 am
by Doc
Just one more quick point here.
Airlines hiring guys to fly jets, fly jets. Loads of bush time is cool, don't get me wrong here, but in the end game, they are flying jets, not bush planes. Once our hero is fully "into" the jet airline world, his bush time is, at best, very good entertainment around the camp fire.. It may have taught him lots. He enjoyed it. It might even have impressed the guys doing the hiring, but in the end, it's in the past. If a man is a lion tamer, it matters not, that he used to train horses...

Posted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 7:40 am
by Beefitarian
This thread needs some imput from that guy with the caps lock and exclamation marks.

"MEN!!!"

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 10:12 am
by Colonel Sanders
Sorry, 748HO won't be heard from, for a while - he got sent back to the Big House (with no internet, horrors) after he was caught violating the terms of his parole,
specifically that he stay 500 feet away from any elementary school or park with children under 12.

The good news is that he's making lots of new friends that like him very much (and frequently).

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sat Apr 21, 2012 10:43 am
by Doc
Colonel Sanders wrote:Sorry, 748HO won't be heard from, for a while - he got sent back to the Big House (with no internet, horrors) after he was caught violating the terms of his parole,
specifically that he stay 500 feet away from any elementary school or park with children under 12.

The good news is that he's making lots of new friends that like him very much (and frequently).
CLASSIC

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2012 12:46 pm
by GyvAir
Doc wrote: If a man is a lion tamer, it matters not, that he used to train horses...
Perhaps not, but maybe having faced at least a few rearing horses in his past, the man might be less apt to freeze the first time a lion roars at him.

Thinking of the current example of the two apparently straight-to-airline co-pilots in the cockpit of AF 447.

Pages 11 – 15:
http://www.bea.aero/docspa/2009/f-cp090 ... 1e3.en.pdf

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sun Apr 22, 2012 1:43 pm
by cv990
[/quote]
Even if you do get sick of nasi goreng after a few years, [/quote]

Never! :D

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Fri May 04, 2012 1:45 pm
by bananaskins
I've just finished reading through all the responses from all the contributors to your questions and I'm surprised nobody who has lived and flown throughout SE Asia would not by now have mentioned some of the more salient points of life in Indonesia.

The Indonesian ladies are probably the most accomodating of all the SE Asian races. They have that lovely Malay appearance which includes (normally) a full figure and pretty face constantly smiling or laughing. And they love to have their fun without holding you to ransome to enjoy it with them!

So go ahead and get the 737 endorsement and go down there to gather some great flying experience with pilots whom I am sure you will find very pleasant to work with and you will learn a great deal about flying from them. I've flown with Indonesian FOs and FEs extensively throughout Asia, the Middle East and Africa and they were to a man, excellent pilots and very nice guys to spend any amount of time with. They remain to this day my close friends.

So forget the other option and get out there and have some fun and gather some invaluable jet time while enjoying your life to the fullest!!

My 2 cents worth!

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sat May 05, 2012 4:54 am
by trey kule
Ok, I have a bit of knowledge of Indonesia...You had better really understand what you are getting into living wise..This is not a cultural learning life experience...it is more a survive mode...and that is from a guy who has worked, flown, and lived on 4 contintents. If nothing else, go there for a couple of weeks and get away from the touristy destinations.....it might help you make your decision.
Secondly, the posts regarding Indonesian airline pilots are, from what I know, pretty much bang on..And speaking of bang on...Garuda bumps them into the ground on quite a regular basis. There is so much corruption that you can not rely on anything being held to a standard. It normally costs less money to bribe someone then to fix something or buy parts.
There are some amazing opportunities world wide right now for pilots.. Great companies. Super good pay and benefits.
Be very very careful and do some real research..asking question is not enough. If you feel the need to use the internet, pprune has a much more international group. I would check them out.

I have to agree. The old navajo might not be glamerous, but she is a great workhorse, and flying in the north will give you experience that will benefit you throughout your whole career. Good for a year or two. The upgrade promisse is a bit tricky for the company for a number of reasons, not the least of which is how you turn out as an employee.
sometimes the most skilled aviatior young pilots are not upgraded because of a lack of maturity, or rough handling of the equipment. The company cannot determine this in advance, and as others have said, a promise is not really a promise (even if it is writing, as the usual written contract will have enough weasal words in it) The other thing I have seen is pilots not being upgraded because the company is aware they are sending out resumes and does not want to commit to the training costs..something some pilots have a difficult time understanding.

Best of luck to you...wont be flying with you as a pax, as I have an absolute no exception rule to flying on Indonesian airlines.

Re: B737 Classic or Kingair, What is your Choice?

Posted: Sat May 05, 2012 8:20 am
by Doc
trey kule wrote:
Best of luck to you...wont be flying with you as a pax, as I have an absolute no exception rule to flying on Indonesian airlines.
I have an absolute no exception rule of not flying on ANY Navajos in Northern Canada, so you won't have me as a pax either!

Enquiring minds want to know.......which way are you going to go?