Initial Cathay Training Schedule
Thread Starter
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 52
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From: Getting radiated at ABERI
Initial Cathay Training Schedule
Hello all... thank you to everyone for putting info online to help prepare me for the Cathay Interview and HK life. I have a question I hope some of you can answer about Training.
From a (much) earlier post by busdriver, I gleaned this information:
Is there any time off in between training modules? Is that schedule that busdriver posted in 2005 still accurate?
Thanks all.
-sub
From a (much) earlier post by busdriver, I gleaned this information:
You can expect to be in the City of Churches (ADL) for 4 weeks. In that time you will do 6 hours on a Dutchess, 28 hours in their JTS (Jet Training Simulator) of Cathay Mouth Music and flows, and also 46 hours of ground school preparation for the various CAD exams.
Then in HKG you will spend your first 2 weeks getting organised within CX and write CAD exams on Thursdays and Fridays.
This is followed by 2.5 weeks of sitting behind a computer screen doing the Computer Based Training which is your ground school. This includes a 2 hour lecture everyday and 5 exams.
The course ends on a Friday and depending on your luck you will either be straight into the sim on Saturday or Monday to start another 3 weeks of 16 Sim sessions (Airbus Only the 744 has 8 I think) (incl your IFR and A/C ratings).
Then over the next two weeks more classes on company policy and Emergency training followed by your first Observation flight.
You will do 9 sectors of LUFUS training and then sector 10 is your line-check over a 2.5 month process. During this period you will be back in the Sim for Module 1 of your S/O continuation training.
CRM and Modules 2 - 6 over the next year (typically ever 60 days and MOD 3 & 6 being the A/C and IFR tests).
When you then will start from Module 1 again and repeat this process until you upgrade to J/FO in 3 years and 6 months since starting the ball rolling.
Then in HKG you will spend your first 2 weeks getting organised within CX and write CAD exams on Thursdays and Fridays.
This is followed by 2.5 weeks of sitting behind a computer screen doing the Computer Based Training which is your ground school. This includes a 2 hour lecture everyday and 5 exams.
The course ends on a Friday and depending on your luck you will either be straight into the sim on Saturday or Monday to start another 3 weeks of 16 Sim sessions (Airbus Only the 744 has 8 I think) (incl your IFR and A/C ratings).
Then over the next two weeks more classes on company policy and Emergency training followed by your first Observation flight.
You will do 9 sectors of LUFUS training and then sector 10 is your line-check over a 2.5 month process. During this period you will be back in the Sim for Module 1 of your S/O continuation training.
CRM and Modules 2 - 6 over the next year (typically ever 60 days and MOD 3 & 6 being the A/C and IFR tests).
When you then will start from Module 1 again and repeat this process until you upgrade to J/FO in 3 years and 6 months since starting the ball rolling.
Thanks all.
-sub
Joined: Mar 2000
Posts: 493
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From: All over the show like a madwomans crap
Everything the Busman said is pretty much spot on. The only difference now in the training is the ground school/CBT/lectures. You now have 5 days to complete the CBT, which is enough time and is scheduled from a Wednesday to a Tuesday, then there is a week of lectures, again Wed to Tues and you sit the final one-off type rating exam of 100 questions on the thursday. Its then straight into the sim sessions, usually start on the sunday, exept you now only get 8 sim sessions, your Instrument Rating on sim 9, base training sim 10 and a loft scenario on sim 11. Then you are let loose on the world. You can expect no time off until you are finished line training, in fact there is a leave and G day request embargo until you are checked to line. In a nut shell, 6 months from Go to Whoa.
Good luck, you'll enjoy it.
Nosey
Good luck, you'll enjoy it.
Nosey
Joined: Aug 2000
Posts: 686
Likes: 0
From: .
Jesus! Does a new joiner only get 10 days for CBT/ground school!
Additionally... "you do 9 sectors of LFUS", of which you may now legally find yourself sitting next to a non-training/checking pilot on a 3 man crew.
Sheesh, anyone would think we are short of crew....
Additionally... "you do 9 sectors of LFUS", of which you may now legally find yourself sitting next to a non-training/checking pilot on a 3 man crew.
Sheesh, anyone would think we are short of crew....
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 1,040
Likes: 2
From: 3.5 from TD
"It's pretty much the same as the S/O course, but without the 4 wks in Adelaide."
Very inacurate. The ground school is similar up to about when you start your full flight simulator course. Then it is completely different. I think 26 sectors is the norm for most DFOs.
Very inacurate. The ground school is similar up to about when you start your full flight simulator course. Then it is completely different. I think 26 sectors is the norm for most DFOs.





