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Flying Instructors & Examiners A place for instructors to communicate with one another because some of them get a bit tired of the attitude that instructing is the lowest form of aviation, as seems to prevail on some of the other forums!

Instructor Shortage

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Old 23rd July 1999 | 02:05
  #1 (permalink)  
Wee Weasley Welshman
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Red face Instructor Shortage

It seems to me that my school would hire 3 new instructors were they available. It also seems that most other schools are looking to recruit given the number of sly job offers I have recieved.

Now if JAA is just about to strangle any more people trying to hours build/self improve surely this shortage is going to hit crisis level after this season? Just where is my replacement coming from?

GA training is facing a holocaust unless I am badly mistaken. Next season you are not going to be able to get a PPL for love nor money.

Have I missread the situation????


WWW
 
Old 23rd July 1999 | 02:11
  #2 (permalink)  
Just another number
 
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Thumbs down

WWW

<<Have I missread the situation????>>

No!

Airclues
Captain Airclues is offline  
Old 23rd July 1999 | 18:38
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britavia
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Wink

maybe CAA/JAA might have to relax the regs to allow instructors from other countries to instruct in their airspace?
 
Old 23rd July 1999 | 20:39
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GulfStreamV
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Lightbulb

WWW,

I think you're spot on!

If you just look back say 12-18months ago, within the mags Pilot,Flyer etc you would be hard pushed to find anybody advertising FI posts. However, take a look at this months Pilot and there are at least half a dozen. It also seems they are thinking more about the package and incentives being offered - Rates of Pay - Company Car - Cheap Rental - Part Time / Full Time / Any Time!.

The future looks good for the Career instructor, although additional costs to achieve under JAR.

GulfStreamV
 
Old 23rd July 1999 | 22:33
  #5 (permalink)  
Wee Weasley Welshman
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Talking

I see that in the latest Pilot today that Euroair are offering 20 pound sper hour for PPL instructors. Remarkable. WWW
 
Old 23rd July 1999 | 22:40
  #6 (permalink)  
ILSNDBVOR
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Red face

This situation has been foreseen by those of us who have been in the industry for some length of time. Forget JAA, the reasons are much more simple than that. The main reason there is currently an instructor shortage, and to a greater extent 509 instructors, is the ease of which 'youngsters' can get a licence these days and pick up an airline job. Just a few short years ago anyone starting out in avaition would serve an 'apprenticeship' as an AFI, then qualify as an FI and continue to build their experience and more importantly their airmanship. These days they pop over to the USA, getting dubious standards of training and undertaking pointless hours building exercises. It means that in a few years time every new f/o with the airlines will have a few hundred hours and no 'nouse' for real flying, and no experience of having to make real decisions unaided by having an experienced captain beside them. BA are on record as wanting 'managers' and not pilots, unfortunetly it looks like they are going to get what they desire.

I truly believe that the ONLY way for our young men and women to enter the professional world of avaition is through the instructor route. I only write this article because there are some on this forum who think they know it all after spending a couple of weeks in Florida hour building and then doing an up-grade course and landing in the right seat of a jet, they have no 'airmanship', I highlight that word so the instructors reading this know what I mean, because those young f/o's will not have a clue.

Before some loud mouth has a go at me (again), I have been down that route, I gave up the airlines to try to put something back into an industry I love, but sometimes I despair, I honestly think we are getting the wrong type of person into flying these days.

So, instructors, stand tall, be proud, after all, without you, none of these whippersnappers would be where they are now, I only wish they could see that for themselves.

I have been very busy of late, as you will no doubt be aware, there are many wannabees out there trying their hand at the IRT, I will try to contribute more, but I will not if I again get shouted down for protecting the UK flying industry, this after all was started as a UK forum, why people want to shout me down for protecting our own industry bemuses me somewhat.

Tally ho, Bournmouth is losing its appeal...

[This message has been edited by ILSNDBVOR (edited 23 July 1999).]
 
Old 24th July 1999 | 04:38
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Oktas8
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Cool

If you opened up QFI positions to Aust/NZ licensed flight instructors, you would have more job applicants than you could poke a stick at.

Oh dear - but then how would you protect airline positions for young up-and-coming local pilots?

Guess it'll be the status quo for a while yet then... (Not that it's any different here!)

regards to all those earning 20 pounds per hour,
O8

[This message has been edited by Oktas8 (edited 24 July 1999).]
 
Old 24th July 1999 | 13:00
  #8 (permalink)  
Wee Weasley Welshman
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Thumbs up

Thanks for that ILSNDBVOR. I am preparing for my Multi/IR course (non-approved) in 9 weeks time. ANYTHING you can contribute that helps me vault this somewhat daunting hurdle would be wolfishly consumed and appreciated. WWW
 
Old 25th July 1999 | 05:40
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Cessnaboy
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Exclamation

O8,

If I could exchange my NZ CPL & instructors rating to a UK equivalent then I would be there in in a shot. With a right to abode, everyone says "..get over to the UK" but to get where I am now I have fully loaned myself to the devil and his wife. I have enquired about converting, even getting my logbook assessed, but it would cost me the same again to convert to the BCPL/AFI and thats not possible. But if they opened it up to qualified intructor pilots then they would have no probs getting people.

Cessnaboy
(sigh with jealous regret at 100+hrs p/mth while struggling to get 15!)
 
Old 25th July 1999 | 06:29
  #10 (permalink)  
Oktas8
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Unhappy

Cessnaboy,
Yes - that's actually what I meant.

I'm doing a C Cat in Palmy at the moment. Happily I'll probably get some kind of aviation related work afterwards, but I would still be over to UK like a shot if I could.

15 hrs/mth? You're doing well - I struggle for 10!

regards
Piperboy (alias Oktas8)
 
Old 25th July 1999 | 13:53
  #11 (permalink)  
DB6
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Unhappy

WWW, get hold of David Hoy's book 'Instrument Flying' - it is the best one I have read on the subject and deals with the UK not FAA IR. Also the RANT (Radio Aids Navigation Tutor) software is invaluable - BAe and Oxford issue it as part of the course - get hold of that and practice the old NDB hold joins, calculating wind correction angles etc. and all the other procedural stuff it contains. Also become as conversant as possible with instrument approach plates (Aerad used at Prestwick - depends what your school will use) since being able to extract the relevant information from them at a glance with your hands full is a very useful talent. Don't think the multi course should give you too many problems, although it helps if you have experience of retractable gear and CS props, leaving you to concentrate fully on the asymmetric aspects.
Cheers, DB6

[This message has been edited by DB6 (edited 27 July 1999).]
 
Old 26th July 1999 | 00:02
  #12 (permalink)  
Wee Weasley Welshman
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Unhappy

Got the book - haven't got the software. Now where's that credit card... WWW

ps thanks.
 
Old 26th July 1999 | 15:06
  #13 (permalink)  
GulfStreamV
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Unhappy

WWW,

Can recommend the software, also take a look at the PPL IR Network web site http://vweb1.hiway.co.uk/aviation/pplir/
quite a good piece of text from an IR CAAFU examiner.

Good Luck!

 
Old 27th July 1999 | 00:17
  #14 (permalink)  
Wee Weasley Welshman
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Unhappy

Thank you. Very interesting. Much obliged. WWW
 
Old 27th July 1999 | 22:15
  #15 (permalink)  
BuGsMaShErDrIvEr
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Question

Does anyone know who'd do a conversion from an Aussie CPL/Instructors to the UK equivalent? A ball park estimate of the cost would also be helpful. Right to live and work in the UK shouldn't be a problem.
Thanks in advance.
 
Old 28th July 1999 | 15:28
  #16 (permalink)  
Cessnaboy
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O8,
Scratch the 15, I'm down to none!!

School I was working for was sold and the exisiting staff, bar 1, were not part of the deal.

I've come to realise that being a C-Cat instructor, under supervision and trained by another organisation is the worst flying disease out.

Good luck for the test.

Nothingboy (formerly Cessna*sniff*boy)
 
Old 30th July 1999 | 16:46
  #17 (permalink)  
autobrakemedium
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Unhappy

ILSNDBVOR

Having done a CPL/IR upgrade and then instructed and now on the A320, I think that I am well placed to reply to your remarks.


You can have people who are self improvers who are excellent and some who are not. And the same applies to 509ers and upgraders.

The sooner the airlines realise this rather than preferring 509ers or self improvers, and took each individual on their own merits the better.


[This message has been edited by autobrakemedium (edited 30 July 1999).]

[This message has been edited by Charlie Foxtrot India (edited 03 August 1999).]
 
Old 30th July 1999 | 21:36
  #18 (permalink)  
ILSNDBVOR
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Angry

.

[This message has been edited by Charlie Foxtrot India (edited 03 August 1999).]
 
Old 31st July 1999 | 18:56
  #19 (permalink)  
tip path plane
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Unhappy

Could someone please tell me the minimum hour required to become a helicopter flight instructor in the uk..not looking for a job just curious..its 400 over here..also what about stiff wing. thanks all
 
Old 3rd August 1999 | 01:57
  #20 (permalink)  
ILSNDBVOR
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Smile

I think it is also 400 here old son. As for real aeroplanes you need a BCPL/CPL that is the minimum.
 


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