Regional Job Advice
#1
Regional Job Advice
Hey Guys
I am a new member with a couple questions and looking for some advice. I know people get on here and do that all the time but I just want to make my first step in the right direction. I am a 1100TT, 200ME MEI who is 22 years of age and looking to go regional. I am a little new to the airline game and I feel a little bit like the new kid in school who cant find his classes. Their are quite a few regionals out there and I am wondering which one to go to and where to start. I like the way Pinnacle looks and have friends there and the CRJ is really appealing but I understand that it is PIC time that counts so I need to stick to something with a prop such as a B1900 or Dash 8? My main goal is to move up to a larger airline to where I could eventually retire from. I would like to go to the regional that will help me advance there the quickest, but yet still get treated right and be happy. I hear a lot of you guys on here talk bad about AE and rave others such as Horizon. What do you guys think of Island Air? Or any other ones? I have a friend who could walk in my resume with Commute Air but I would like to avoid Plattsburgh and Clevland if I could. I am living south GA and relocation is not going to be a problem although my wife really isnt a fan of the extreme cold but should might move to the far north for the right reason. There a lot of disgruntled pilots that are on here and dont have very many positive things to say, and thats not what I am looking for. Any realistic advice would be greatly appreciated.
I am a new member with a couple questions and looking for some advice. I know people get on here and do that all the time but I just want to make my first step in the right direction. I am a 1100TT, 200ME MEI who is 22 years of age and looking to go regional. I am a little new to the airline game and I feel a little bit like the new kid in school who cant find his classes. Their are quite a few regionals out there and I am wondering which one to go to and where to start. I like the way Pinnacle looks and have friends there and the CRJ is really appealing but I understand that it is PIC time that counts so I need to stick to something with a prop such as a B1900 or Dash 8? My main goal is to move up to a larger airline to where I could eventually retire from. I would like to go to the regional that will help me advance there the quickest, but yet still get treated right and be happy. I hear a lot of you guys on here talk bad about AE and rave others such as Horizon. What do you guys think of Island Air? Or any other ones? I have a friend who could walk in my resume with Commute Air but I would like to avoid Plattsburgh and Clevland if I could. I am living south GA and relocation is not going to be a problem although my wife really isnt a fan of the extreme cold but should might move to the far north for the right reason. There a lot of disgruntled pilots that are on here and dont have very many positive things to say, and thats not what I am looking for. Any realistic advice would be greatly appreciated.
#2
Welcome...Are you qualified for military service? If so, why not give them a look - you'll get the best training out there and be flying anything from a F-15 to a C-17...
I read PIC time is what counts - go where the upgrade comes quickly...
-LAFF
I read PIC time is what counts - go where the upgrade comes quickly...
-LAFF
#3
My best advice is this because you are so young. (Average age to get hired at a major is 35-37)
Find a regional that has a domicile where you live or where you are willing to move to. Regional life can suck if you have to commute. Stay away from girlfriend/boyfriend until your career is on track. Pick up all open time you can and make top $$$, you will be flying so much you won't have time to spend! Before you know it, you will be captain, and logging Turbine PIC. At your age I would not sacrifice a regional that can provide good work rules with acceptable upgrade time. You don't need the Turbine PIC today being only 22. If I were in your spot, I would be single, ready and willing to move and be looking at Skywest, ExpressJet, and Chautauqua/Republic/Shuttle and Air Wisconsin as my first choices.
Seriously though, the hastle of commuting is just stress you don't need at $19-$24/hr. LIVE IN BASE. I never dreamed how different my job satisfaction could be until I lived in base. Totally different world.
Good luck to you. You are in a great place. Stay away from anything Northwest if you want stability right now!
Meet everyone you can that works for a mainline carrier, get a two or three bedroom townhouse or condo and rent two rooms out to guys that need a crash pad that fly for FedEx, UPS, Continental, Southwest, Frontier, etc. These are the people that will see you into the right seat of the 757 in 5-8 years. Getting to the majors is much more about who you know that can sponser/recommend you than how much above minumum hiring requirements you are in your logbook. Worry just as much about meeting the right people and building relationships with them from today until you are on the seniority list with a widebody carrier.
Find a regional that has a domicile where you live or where you are willing to move to. Regional life can suck if you have to commute. Stay away from girlfriend/boyfriend until your career is on track. Pick up all open time you can and make top $$$, you will be flying so much you won't have time to spend! Before you know it, you will be captain, and logging Turbine PIC. At your age I would not sacrifice a regional that can provide good work rules with acceptable upgrade time. You don't need the Turbine PIC today being only 22. If I were in your spot, I would be single, ready and willing to move and be looking at Skywest, ExpressJet, and Chautauqua/Republic/Shuttle and Air Wisconsin as my first choices.
Seriously though, the hastle of commuting is just stress you don't need at $19-$24/hr. LIVE IN BASE. I never dreamed how different my job satisfaction could be until I lived in base. Totally different world.
Good luck to you. You are in a great place. Stay away from anything Northwest if you want stability right now!
Meet everyone you can that works for a mainline carrier, get a two or three bedroom townhouse or condo and rent two rooms out to guys that need a crash pad that fly for FedEx, UPS, Continental, Southwest, Frontier, etc. These are the people that will see you into the right seat of the 757 in 5-8 years. Getting to the majors is much more about who you know that can sponser/recommend you than how much above minumum hiring requirements you are in your logbook. Worry just as much about meeting the right people and building relationships with them from today until you are on the seniority list with a widebody carrier.
#4
Move out west and fly for Skywest. If you're wife isn't willing to move it's going to be a much tougher road for the both of you! Sacrifice now for the benefits you may reap later!
Last edited by Slice; 06-15-2006 at 07:09 AM.
#5
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Nov 2005
Posts: 1,425
Originally Posted by rubbersidedown
Hey Guys
I am a new member with a couple questions and looking for some advice. I know people get on here and do that all the time but I just want to make my first step in the right direction. I am a 1100TT, 200ME MEI who is 22 years of age and looking to go regional. I am a little new to the airline game and I feel a little bit like the new kid in school who cant find his classes. Their are quite a few regionals out there and I am wondering which one to go to and where to start. I like the way Pinnacle looks and have friends there and the CRJ is really appealing but I understand that it is PIC time that counts so I need to stick to something with a prop such as a B1900 or Dash 8? My main goal is to move up to a larger airline to where I could eventually retire from. I would like to go to the regional that will help me advance there the quickest, but yet still get treated right and be happy. I hear a lot of you guys on here talk bad about AE and rave others such as Horizon. What do you guys think of Island Air? Or any other ones? I have a friend who could walk in my resume with Commute Air but I would like to avoid Plattsburgh and Clevland if I could. I am living south GA and relocation is not going to be a problem although my wife really isnt a fan of the extreme cold but should might move to the far north for the right reason. There a lot of disgruntled pilots that are on here and dont have very many positive things to say, and thats not what I am looking for. Any realistic advice would be greatly appreciated.
I am a new member with a couple questions and looking for some advice. I know people get on here and do that all the time but I just want to make my first step in the right direction. I am a 1100TT, 200ME MEI who is 22 years of age and looking to go regional. I am a little new to the airline game and I feel a little bit like the new kid in school who cant find his classes. Their are quite a few regionals out there and I am wondering which one to go to and where to start. I like the way Pinnacle looks and have friends there and the CRJ is really appealing but I understand that it is PIC time that counts so I need to stick to something with a prop such as a B1900 or Dash 8? My main goal is to move up to a larger airline to where I could eventually retire from. I would like to go to the regional that will help me advance there the quickest, but yet still get treated right and be happy. I hear a lot of you guys on here talk bad about AE and rave others such as Horizon. What do you guys think of Island Air? Or any other ones? I have a friend who could walk in my resume with Commute Air but I would like to avoid Plattsburgh and Clevland if I could. I am living south GA and relocation is not going to be a problem although my wife really isnt a fan of the extreme cold but should might move to the far north for the right reason. There a lot of disgruntled pilots that are on here and dont have very many positive things to say, and thats not what I am looking for. Any realistic advice would be greatly appreciated.
I would seriously look at Skywest and Chautauqa/Republic. Those are the ones that seem to be operated by people that know what they are doing. Although, that being said, picking a regional is a crap shot. You could go to someplace that has a current upgrade of 4 years but upgrade in 12 months if they expand rapidly.
So I agree with the above poster, try to get on at a company that has bases where you live, or are willing to move to. The problem with regionals is that their bases open and close ALL THE TIME. Look at AWAC, they went from all midwest flying to all east coast flying in <12 months. Some people have had 4 domicile changes in < 3 years!
Don't discount freight. You seem to almost have the 135 requirements. Airnet is a good company with about a 3 year upgrade to Lear CA. Ameriflight has Beech 99's, multi turbine PIC, with upgrades in 6 months if you are willing to move around out in the west coast. And their pay is a little bit better than a regional to start, although that's a wash at second year pay.
Flying for a regional isn't the "best life" one could imagine. In fact, even working for a "good" one, and living in base, it's still hard on first year pay. Second year pay is OK, if you are willing to work hard.
#6
I woud reccomend going with the place you think you can get turbine PIC under FAR 121 the quickest. There are many schools of thought, but if you go to a place like Great Lakes you get treated fairly with poor pay and benefits. If upgrade to Captain is in the 18 month range you will be making more than flying F/O on an RJ and building PIC. There are other places you can do this, I am more familiar with Lakes.
One more thing, only change jobs if there is a tangible benefit that could be seen by your interview board at the place you want to end up. Many majors frown upon job changes that look lateral or even backwards. Seniority rules, so get your PIC time ASAP and try and get some check airman experience once you are a Captain, that is very important to help set you apart from everyone else who is equal in time and experience.
Hope this helps.
One more thing, only change jobs if there is a tangible benefit that could be seen by your interview board at the place you want to end up. Many majors frown upon job changes that look lateral or even backwards. Seniority rules, so get your PIC time ASAP and try and get some check airman experience once you are a Captain, that is very important to help set you apart from everyone else who is equal in time and experience.
Hope this helps.
#7
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Nov 2005
Posts: 1,425
Originally Posted by 2cylinderdriver
If upgrade to Captain is in the 18 month range you will be making more than flying F/O on an RJ
The PIC train of thought is correct, it may work for someone that has connections but if you don't have any connections it doesn't help one bit. With that being said, having TPIC, especially 121 PIC at great lakes is ALWAYS A PLUS. It is tough flying that will make you a GREAT pilot. If you can stand the pay, and the QOL for a few years, it'll probably pay off.
#8
Originally Posted by fosters
This is incorrect. One would have to be a 9 year CA on the 1900 to make what I make on my second year, and a 3 year CA on the EMB to make what I make second year.
The PIC train of thought is correct, it may work for someone that has connections but if you don't have any connections it doesn't help one bit. With that being said, having TPIC, especially 121 PIC at great lakes is ALWAYS A PLUS. It is tough flying that will make you a GREAT pilot. If you can stand the pay, and the QOL for a few years, it'll probably pay off.
The PIC train of thought is correct, it may work for someone that has connections but if you don't have any connections it doesn't help one bit. With that being said, having TPIC, especially 121 PIC at great lakes is ALWAYS A PLUS. It is tough flying that will make you a GREAT pilot. If you can stand the pay, and the QOL for a few years, it'll probably pay off.
Start making those connections as well, in the current environment you will also need the help of internal recs. this may not be the same when you are ready to apply to the majors.
#9
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Jun 2006
Position: EMB170 FO
Posts: 168
Seriously though, the hastle of commuting is just stress you don't need at $19-$24/hr. LIVE IN BASE. I never dreamed how different my job satisfaction could be until I lived in base. Totally different world.
Commuting is for the birds. If you live in base, your life will be much, much, much better. Do not commute, especially when you are making peanuts and can't afford to sleep anywhere but the crew room. DO NOT COMMUTE!
Commuting is for the birds. If you live in base, your life will be much, much, much better. Do not commute, especially when you are making peanuts and can't afford to sleep anywhere but the crew room. DO NOT COMMUTE!
#10
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Feb 2006
Posts: 584
Also check out Colgan Air. I have a buddy that's in training with them and he's liking it. Upgrade on the Saab comes in 12-18 months I hear, with probably about $40K-$45K as first year Captain. They use mostly "outstation" basing (Allentown, PA., etc.), so it forces you to live in domicile.
My friend also said he's pretty sure that Colgan has a "prefered hiring" thing with Continental, FWIW.
My friend also said he's pretty sure that Colgan has a "prefered hiring" thing with Continental, FWIW.
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