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Old 11th Oct 2018, 15:24
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nord121
 
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Originally Posted by Chris the Robot
You want a job in the meantime which will eanble you to save yet will provide you with useful life experience for the airline interview. If I was 18 again, I'd look closely at becoming a railway signaller. You get paid over 75% of your final salary during training (approx 1 year) so if you're in a complex signal box you're looking at over £30k year before you're even productive. Lots of overtime opportunities once you're qualified you should be able to smash a grand a month into a savings account even if you're living away from home.. It's a very good career on it's own, the the smaller boxes are facing redundancies due to everything being moved to the ROCs.

The railway is generally good with salaries and overtime, a platform dislatcher can make well north of £30k with a bit of overtime. The Merchant Navy is good too, minimal living expenses, relatively little tax once you're qualified and plenty of time to study. Sales careers can be good earners if that's something you're good at (I'm not), I do think you need to be a certain "type" to succeed in sales.

Bear in mind, shift work and safety critical jobs are both relevant to the pilot role, if you've had an interesting job prior to pilot training, it does make you a more interesting candidate at interview.
+1 for the merchant navy. This is what I’m currently doing, however it took me three years to train as a 3rd officer. However it now enables me to save up a shed load of money, train in my 6 months off a year and most of the teaching is distance learning so I can do it onboard.

Oh and every merchant navy officer cadetship is free! So instead of saving for 20 years... get a cadetship for three, save and train for 3 and come out debt free!

Nord.
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