Flexjet Europe starts up
Join Date: May 2018
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I interviewed there recently. I did the sim first on a Citation XLS I think, cant remember but it was one of those smaller corporate jets. They do not give you a profile before you arrive but give a fairly thorough briefing before you go to the sim. A bit of a funky aircraft but was fun to fly. My sim and my partners went well, we were both pretty accurate on what we did.
The day started off with us showing up at 8.15am, meeting the HR lady Sarah and another line captain who talked to us about the company, day to day issues and answered any questions we had. The final salary for both CA and FO is still in negotiation but was told it will be finalised this coming week and would be told how much.
After the sim we had about a 30 min break to have a drink of water and some lunch which they paid for, rather nice of them and made us feel welcome and relaxed all day.
Then we had the face to face interview, took us one at a time for about an hour each. All in all the day was about 6 hours long for 2 candidates to be interviewed and completed. We were bone by 2.30pm
Face to face was about getting to know you and how you think, what are your priorities in aviation, putting the customer first, safety and some tech questions like approach ban, fuel requirements, gen failures and how you have dealt with bad situations in the past and your understanding of corporate aviation.
The sim consists of a climb out, clean up at acceleration altitude, get to 4000, steep turns, climb and descend at 1000fpm and 200 knots, an ILS and a V1 Cut. Really not as bad as it sounds and they are very understanding, know you have not flown that plane and make it clear they are not looking for IFR TEST STANDARD but they do expect you to identify mistakes and correct them.
Like any other sim assessment, can this guy be trained and does he learn from mistakes, is there progress etc? The rotation is 7 on and 5 off with travel on day 1 and 7, never on your off days, so basically 6 nights away and 6 nights at home if you include day 7 which is your go home day.
Overall I think it is a very fair interview and they are straight forward and honest with you.
The day started off with us showing up at 8.15am, meeting the HR lady Sarah and another line captain who talked to us about the company, day to day issues and answered any questions we had. The final salary for both CA and FO is still in negotiation but was told it will be finalised this coming week and would be told how much.
After the sim we had about a 30 min break to have a drink of water and some lunch which they paid for, rather nice of them and made us feel welcome and relaxed all day.
Then we had the face to face interview, took us one at a time for about an hour each. All in all the day was about 6 hours long for 2 candidates to be interviewed and completed. We were bone by 2.30pm
Face to face was about getting to know you and how you think, what are your priorities in aviation, putting the customer first, safety and some tech questions like approach ban, fuel requirements, gen failures and how you have dealt with bad situations in the past and your understanding of corporate aviation.
The sim consists of a climb out, clean up at acceleration altitude, get to 4000, steep turns, climb and descend at 1000fpm and 200 knots, an ILS and a V1 Cut. Really not as bad as it sounds and they are very understanding, know you have not flown that plane and make it clear they are not looking for IFR TEST STANDARD but they do expect you to identify mistakes and correct them.
Like any other sim assessment, can this guy be trained and does he learn from mistakes, is there progress etc? The rotation is 7 on and 5 off with travel on day 1 and 7, never on your off days, so basically 6 nights away and 6 nights at home if you include day 7 which is your go home day.
Overall I think it is a very fair interview and they are straight forward and honest with you.
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I interviewed there recently. I did the sim first on a Citation XLS I think, cant remember but it was one of those smaller corporate jets. They do not give you a profile before you arrive but give a fairly thorough briefing before you go to the sim. A bit of a funky aircraft but was fun to fly. My sim and my partners went well, we were both pretty accurate on what we did.
The day started off with us showing up at 8.15am, meeting the HR lady Sarah and another line captain who talked to us about the company, day to day issues and answered any questions we had. The final salary for both CA and FO is still in negotiation but was told it will be finalised this coming week and would be told how much.
After the sim we had about a 30 min break to have a drink of water and some lunch which they paid for, rather nice of them and made us feel welcome and relaxed all day.
Then we had the face to face interview, took us one at a time for about an hour each. All in all the day was about 6 hours long for 2 candidates to be interviewed and completed. We were bone by 2.30pm
Face to face was about getting to know you and how you think, what are your priorities in aviation, putting the customer first, safety and some tech questions like approach ban, fuel requirements, gen failures and how you have dealt with bad situations in the past and your understanding of corporate aviation.
The sim consists of a climb out, clean up at acceleration altitude, get to 4000, steep turns, climb and descend at 1000fpm and 200 knots, an ILS and a V1 Cut. Really not as bad as it sounds and they are very understanding, know you have not flown that plane and make it clear they are not looking for IFR TEST STANDARD but they do expect you to identify mistakes and correct them.
Like any other sim assessment, can this guy be trained and does he learn from mistakes, is there progress etc? The rotation is 7 on and 5 off with travel on day 1 and 7, never on your off days, so basically 6 nights away and 6 nights at home if you include day 7 which is your go home day.
Overall I think it is a very fair interview and they are straight forward and honest with you.
The day started off with us showing up at 8.15am, meeting the HR lady Sarah and another line captain who talked to us about the company, day to day issues and answered any questions we had. The final salary for both CA and FO is still in negotiation but was told it will be finalised this coming week and would be told how much.
After the sim we had about a 30 min break to have a drink of water and some lunch which they paid for, rather nice of them and made us feel welcome and relaxed all day.
Then we had the face to face interview, took us one at a time for about an hour each. All in all the day was about 6 hours long for 2 candidates to be interviewed and completed. We were bone by 2.30pm
Face to face was about getting to know you and how you think, what are your priorities in aviation, putting the customer first, safety and some tech questions like approach ban, fuel requirements, gen failures and how you have dealt with bad situations in the past and your understanding of corporate aviation.
The sim consists of a climb out, clean up at acceleration altitude, get to 4000, steep turns, climb and descend at 1000fpm and 200 knots, an ILS and a V1 Cut. Really not as bad as it sounds and they are very understanding, know you have not flown that plane and make it clear they are not looking for IFR TEST STANDARD but they do expect you to identify mistakes and correct them.
Like any other sim assessment, can this guy be trained and does he learn from mistakes, is there progress etc? The rotation is 7 on and 5 off with travel on day 1 and 7, never on your off days, so basically 6 nights away and 6 nights at home if you include day 7 which is your go home day.
Overall I think it is a very fair interview and they are straight forward and honest with you.
Join Date: Dec 2004
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I interviewed there recently. I did the sim first on a Citation XLS I think, cant remember but it was one of those smaller corporate jets. They do not give you a profile before you arrive but give a fairly thorough briefing before you go to the sim. A bit of a funky aircraft but was fun to fly. My sim and my partners went well, we were both pretty accurate on what we did.
The day started off with us showing up at 8.15am, meeting the HR lady Sarah and another line captain who talked to us about the company, day to day issues and answered any questions we had. The final salary for both CA and FO is still in negotiation but was told it will be finalised this coming week and would be told how much.
After the sim we had about a 30 min break to have a drink of water and some lunch which they paid for, rather nice of them and made us feel welcome and relaxed all day.
Then we had the face to face interview, took us one at a time for about an hour each. All in all the day was about 6 hours long for 2 candidates to be interviewed and completed. We were bone by 2.30pm
Face to face was about getting to know you and how you think, what are your priorities in aviation, putting the customer first, safety and some tech questions like approach ban, fuel requirements, gen failures and how you have dealt with bad situations in the past and your understanding of corporate aviation.
The sim consists of a climb out, clean up at acceleration altitude, get to 4000, steep turns, climb and descend at 1000fpm and 200 knots, an ILS and a V1 Cut. Really not as bad as it sounds and they are very understanding, know you have not flown that plane and make it clear they are not looking for IFR TEST STANDARD but they do expect you to identify mistakes and correct them.
Like any other sim assessment, can this guy be trained and does he learn from mistakes, is there progress etc? The rotation is 7 on and 5 off with travel on day 1 and 7, never on your off days, so basically 6 nights away and 6 nights at home if you include day 7 which is your go home day.
Overall I think it is a very fair interview and they are straight forward and honest with you.
The day started off with us showing up at 8.15am, meeting the HR lady Sarah and another line captain who talked to us about the company, day to day issues and answered any questions we had. The final salary for both CA and FO is still in negotiation but was told it will be finalised this coming week and would be told how much.
After the sim we had about a 30 min break to have a drink of water and some lunch which they paid for, rather nice of them and made us feel welcome and relaxed all day.
Then we had the face to face interview, took us one at a time for about an hour each. All in all the day was about 6 hours long for 2 candidates to be interviewed and completed. We were bone by 2.30pm
Face to face was about getting to know you and how you think, what are your priorities in aviation, putting the customer first, safety and some tech questions like approach ban, fuel requirements, gen failures and how you have dealt with bad situations in the past and your understanding of corporate aviation.
The sim consists of a climb out, clean up at acceleration altitude, get to 4000, steep turns, climb and descend at 1000fpm and 200 knots, an ILS and a V1 Cut. Really not as bad as it sounds and they are very understanding, know you have not flown that plane and make it clear they are not looking for IFR TEST STANDARD but they do expect you to identify mistakes and correct them.
Like any other sim assessment, can this guy be trained and does he learn from mistakes, is there progress etc? The rotation is 7 on and 5 off with travel on day 1 and 7, never on your off days, so basically 6 nights away and 6 nights at home if you include day 7 which is your go home day.
Overall I think it is a very fair interview and they are straight forward and honest with you.
Is the sim for Captains flown raw data or with the flight directors on?.
Thanks again and have a great day.
KR.
Join Date: Dec 2004
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I was told last week on the phone interview that now they are recruiting mainly for the Nextants but there might be a few slots for the Legacy.
Also they spoke about the possibility of G650s coming in the near future and the Red Label program subjected to individuals performance and merits.
Dont shoot the messenger
KR.
Also they spoke about the possibility of G650s coming in the near future and the Red Label program subjected to individuals performance and merits.
Dont shoot the messenger

KR.
Join Date: May 2018
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Keep those power settings and just let the speed bleed from 180 clean to 160 at F15, then gear down and full flap gives you 140 knots, no other settings and no other power changes in level flight. Once you intercept the GS just adjust accordingly, really easy.
I believe 70% in climb at about 10 degrees gives you 200 knot and 1000 FPM but could be as high as 80% but it is in that range.
My advice would be fly it like the jet you currently fly using your procedures and adapt to these power settings and you will sail thru.
Thats really it, no big tricks
Last edited by Daddy Fantastic; 25th Aug 2019 at 16:03.
Join Date: May 2018
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I was told last week on the phone interview that now they are recruiting mainly for the Nextants but there might be a few slots for the Legacy.
Also they spoke about the possibility of G650s coming in the near future and the Red Label program subjected to individuals performance and merits.
Dont shoot the messenger
KR.
Also they spoke about the possibility of G650s coming in the near future and the Red Label program subjected to individuals performance and merits.
Dont shoot the messenger

KR.
Join Date: May 2018
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The CA I spoke to about the Nextant says its a blast and they are getting a lot of time off, looking at 30 to 40 hours a month which for a guy like me who does not need to hour build is perfect.
If jet hours are your thing and you suffer from SJS and are looking to be an Emirates 777 CA then join Ryanair and do 900 hours a year and eventually get into Emirates.
If you are looking for quality of life and dont feel the need to retire with 25000 hours like me then go for it. They are expanding and I can guarantee for sure they will be getting a bigger and better fleet over the next few years including the Embraer Praetor and Gulfstream aircraft.
Join Date: Dec 2004
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It is raw data for both FO and CA, no FD or autothrottle...think Cessna 172 with jet engines strapped to it. In clean level flight 48% to 50% N1 works well and even for configuring.
Keep those power settings and just let the speed bleed from 180 clean to 160 at F15, then gear down and full flap gives you 140 knots, no other settings and no other power changes in level flight. Once you intercept the GS just adjust accordingly, really easy.
I believe 70% in climb at about 10 degrees gives you 200 knot and 1000 FPM but could be as high as 80% but it is in that range.
My advice would be fly it like the jet you currently fly using your procedures and adapt to these power settings and you will sail thru.
Thats really it, no big tricks
Keep those power settings and just let the speed bleed from 180 clean to 160 at F15, then gear down and full flap gives you 140 knots, no other settings and no other power changes in level flight. Once you intercept the GS just adjust accordingly, really easy.
I believe 70% in climb at about 10 degrees gives you 200 knot and 1000 FPM but could be as high as 80% but it is in that range.
My advice would be fly it like the jet you currently fly using your procedures and adapt to these power settings and you will sail thru.
Thats really it, no big tricks
All the best.
KR.
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It's hardly insider information really is it! It's exactly what you'd expect from a SIM assessment. If you're not any good at these basics the brief isn't going to help anyway.
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How can a piece of shit aircraft like the H400 become a blast all of a sudden ?
I do not get why they did not pick a good jet (like Lear 35 etc etc) and retrofit it... Why pick a jet that was shite from the beginning ?
Because its extremely cheap ?
I do not get why they did not pick a good jet (like Lear 35 etc etc) and retrofit it... Why pick a jet that was shite from the beginning ?

Because its extremely cheap ?
What exactly makes it a POS aircraft in your estimation? I found it to be a solid little jet back when I flew it.
Regardless of the choice of aircraft: Am I the only one to question the timing of this Flexjet Europe relaunch? It looks to me like the next recession is fairly imminent. I for one would launch a new offering in the early days of a strong economy, and not when the downturn is just a question of "will it happen this year or next?".
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Regardless of the choice of aircraft: Am I the only one to question the timing of this Flexjet Europe relaunch? It looks to me like the next recession is fairly imminent. I for one would launch a new offering in the early days of a strong economy, and not when the downturn is just a question of "will it happen this year or next?".
CP
CaptainProp Germany will be in a recession in Q3 of 2019. And most likely there will be a hard Brexit, as the clown from the Thames has taken control of it. France is not doing great, either. Don't let me start talking about Italy.
I don't find the timing of Flexjet Europe's re-launch very well thought out, they are 4 or 5 years late. I hope they will not become another Jet Republic.
I don't find the timing of Flexjet Europe's re-launch very well thought out, they are 4 or 5 years late. I hope they will not become another Jet Republic.