Commercial Pilot to Test Pilot?
Thread Starter
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 32
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From: UK
Commercial Pilot to Test Pilot?
Dear all,
I have been wondering if it is possible for a commercial pilot with a degree in Aeronautics to become a professional test pilot?
Do you know of people who have done this?
How have they done it?
Thanks in advance,
Gusty.
I have been wondering if it is possible for a commercial pilot with a degree in Aeronautics to become a professional test pilot?
Do you know of people who have done this?
How have they done it?
Thanks in advance,
Gusty.
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Joined: Feb 2000
Aviation Qualifications: CPL
Posts: 14,480
Likes: 178
From: UK
It's more common to find an aeronautical engineer with a CPL becoming a TP - the reason being that test flying is far more an extension of engineering work than it is of commercial flying.
The odds are that the "big boys" (Airbus, Boeing and the like) won't be all that interested in you because they tend to employ almost exclusively TPS graduates. Smaller companies however are often looking for part-time test flying talent, which might be the way in. This tends to mean either companies developing or producing light aircraft, or companies developing equipment - avionics or engines for example.
My suggestion, and I freely admit it's a loose one, is to look for smaller companies where the combination of flying experience and an engineering education is something that they might be interested in tapping into on a part-time basis. But it's a shrinking industry and a degree of luck is probably necessary to get your foot in the door. Alternatively if you are in the UK look to the PFA and/or BMAA, or if in the USA look to the EAA and perhaps get initially involved in the test-flying of prototype and homebuilt aeroplanes.
G
The odds are that the "big boys" (Airbus, Boeing and the like) won't be all that interested in you because they tend to employ almost exclusively TPS graduates. Smaller companies however are often looking for part-time test flying talent, which might be the way in. This tends to mean either companies developing or producing light aircraft, or companies developing equipment - avionics or engines for example.
My suggestion, and I freely admit it's a loose one, is to look for smaller companies where the combination of flying experience and an engineering education is something that they might be interested in tapping into on a part-time basis. But it's a shrinking industry and a degree of luck is probably necessary to get your foot in the door. Alternatively if you are in the UK look to the PFA and/or BMAA, or if in the USA look to the EAA and perhaps get initially involved in the test-flying of prototype and homebuilt aeroplanes.
G




