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-   -   Ryanair Interview and Sim Assessment (merged) (https://www.pprune.org/interviews-jobs-sponsorship/222538-ryanair-interview-sim-assessment-merged.html)

Polarhero 30th Jan 2007 14:18

CAE Ryanair
 
Sure did, I'm going for assessment in Dublin on the Feb 16th.

Anyone got any idea what to expect at the assessment, all they say is Sim check, Tech questions 45min and Interview for 45min.

So if anyone can give me any ideas what they will be looking for in the tech paper?

Cheers

I'll let people know what it was like when i get back form it

:ok:

nuclear weapon 30th Jan 2007 14:40

Polarhero

Relax mine is on the 9th. What did you mean by sure did. Did they give you an agreement in principle. Anyway I have been practicing on flight sim everyday holds different entries you name it. I will also be booking a sim prep sesion with a certain company . However having read what has been said on some forums I will not mention it to the interviewers that I had a practice session the day before as they will expect a higher standard from you.

Having said that I will hope the company in question keeps thier customers names confidential.

daelo 30th Jan 2007 15:20

I did the assessment on 5Th of january. Everything seemed good, I did a good sim, they asked me only one question (low pressure) and to repeat a Clearence...but I didn't pass the assessment and I don't know Why, because they don't give explanation...It's not an isolated case, other three people I know did the assessment on January and didn't pass...all for the Cadet position...so be carefull...
at EMA everything is the same: luton, sid, ndb approach with minor failure..
good luck to everyone

cessna310 30th Jan 2007 17:49

Polarhero,



Thanks for reply, good luck for assessment.When did u receive call or email?your flying career details please.
I heard that they ask general question about a/c which u flew last for tech asse.

Best Regards and best of luck again,
cessna310.

Polarhero 30th Jan 2007 18:19

310,
Ok the time it has taken so far....
First filled in the form on the CAE website back end of Dec, don't remember the date but it was after Christmas.
I got the first email, the one asking for an update of CV on the 24th of Jan.
Responded to that with up to date CV and updated form on website on the same day.
Then got the email on the 29th asking if i would like to attend for assessment, this gave me the option of three days in feb, 16th, 21st and
22nd.
I decided the 16th was best for me so emailed back same day (29th) to ask for that day. Got the email confirming the date etc today.
Ask for career to date,
PPL in 1997
ATPL G/S started sept 2005 finished may 06, @ NAC G/S
CPL ME IR, July - Nov 06, Triple A @ Humberside
MCC Dec 06 @ ATF
FI, Dec06 -Jan 07 @LFS.
Just starting work as FI when the paper work comes back from Gatwick.
Hope that answers everything.
:ok:

inveritas 30th Jan 2007 19:15

For the assessment you need to have a good level of English language skills. That is possibly why you failed. There are now no delays in Ryanair cadet training. The type rating takes approx 6 weeks. You normally base train within two weeks and then start line training immediately.

You don't get a choice of base but the airline is expanding in Dublin, East Midlands and Girona. So you may end up in any of these. You get paid from the date of the completion of your training.

BBT 30th Jan 2007 20:56

inveritas you are not familiar with Ryanair if you say that. Remember you are giving advice here to people with a lot to lose. Your confident and apparently knowledgeable tone is misleading. One example - nobody gets a permanent contract in Dublin. Nobody knows that until after they part with their money. They are given a "take it or leave it" offer of a Brookfield contract at a later point.

Am I right, or am I wrong?

nuclear weapon 30th Jan 2007 21:01

Luton 6b SID
 
Hi guys I've been busy with this profile for some time and it does appear as if the 215 radial on BNN tends to come before you reach the suggested 1500ft turning point for jets when taking off on rwy 26. This is on my flight sim to those who've done the real assesment is it the same in the sim at EMA. Any pointers will be wellcome.

Avadoo 30th Jan 2007 21:17

NW, check your PM's

cessna310 30th Jan 2007 21:57

Polarhero,


Thanks for reply.
Best of luck again,
Best Regards,
Cessna310http://www.pprune.org/forums/images/...ons/icon14.gif

Sky Goose 31st Jan 2007 16:41

Have also been putting in the hours on FS 2004, also finding that the 215 radial comes in just before you reach 1500ft.
Any pointers welcome.
Also do you guys have any feedback with regards to weather, ie. ceilings, vis on departure and landing. Also any info on wind direction and speed would also be helpful.
Thanks in advance, and good luck to all, I'm up on the 7th of Feb at EMA, may my NDB needle not sway off the 257.....
cheers
Goose

nuclear weapon 31st Jan 2007 22:26

I am looking for ward to booking a sim slot for the 8th as my assesment is on the 9th with realsimulation is there anyone that might be interested in either sharing or if we book a two hour slot we can have an hour each of pf and pnf rather than with the trainers.

ciopu 1st Feb 2007 10:46

Hi Guys my name is Federico and and i have few questions for you as i'm trying to be part of the assesment.
I had apllied this summer just after the license to CAE and SAS, but still no sign of life from this people.
I currently work for Ryanair as Cabin crew and asking to the newest FOs, most of them send thir CV in the right hands and obtained the assement in a week, now i'm so curious........this is the only way to reach the assesment or some of you obtain this in the normal way??...applying in internet and that's it or somethings else??

My flight experience is flight cadet....fATPL MCC all the staffs and 200TT.

Please if someone have any advice i really appreciate..
Thanks guys

High Wing Drifter 1st Feb 2007 17:46

Gator,

Where'd you find out that about the unofficial age limitation?

fullrich 1st Feb 2007 19:05

Having completed the MCC at Dublin I think I might know your reliable source who sim preps. I would be of the opinion that 32 is his age limitation and not Ryanairs. He likes to boast about his success with sim preps for FR but will of course only choose who he deems suitable,not Ryanair!

High Wing Drifter 1st Feb 2007 19:14

Gator,

Interesting, I know the person you are talking about, he was one of the instructors during my MCC. He didn't mention this and in fact suggested I go for Ryanair!

I'm well over 32 BTW.

Tis a murky world :hmm:

Edit to say that it looks like Gator deleted his posts. In fact I am 40 and have an assessment date with FR, so any notion of an age limit of bollocks

fullrich 1st Feb 2007 19:51

No Im not referring to Se Pardy. If this guy doesnt do the MCC course in the same builiding then I would be surprised. It also means that there are at least 2 sim prep instructors for FR at Dublin??

Crashlanding 2nd Feb 2007 16:19

Has anyone had an email in the last few days for an assesment on the 737-800 at EMA like me?

Professor Rubik 2nd Feb 2007 17:48

Not just yet but I am hoping to hear something any day……

Is there a particular reason why yours is in the -800 and not the -200 like the majority?

Several people here seem to have been called for an assessment following the cae info update email. Whether or not there is any pattern as to the order in which people are called, or the time period between these communications, I haven’t yet worked out.

Any information in this area would be welcomed.

Crashlanding 2nd Feb 2007 17:58

I too recieved the email asking for my CV from CAE which got sent that night.

This email informing me about both the sim dates and then confirmation that I have the date I wanted have come from an @ryanair email address so I can only believe this is from CAE rather than SAS.

My sim days are all at the end of march

Email says its on the -800

High Wing Drifter 2nd Feb 2007 18:01

Ah! Professor! (sorry reminds me of Fosters ad from yonks back).

I get the distinct impression for many the process is simply to start at the top and select the number of interviewable applications - probably in a rough order of date received depending if anybody dropped the pile on the floor at some point or not. When the appropriate number has been found stop looking. Not a process of looking at all applications and weighing up the pros and cons of each.

Polarhero 2nd Feb 2007 18:01

My email asking for an update was from CAE.
All other emails have been from Ryanair, as for sim type i am on the -200 in Dublin on the 16th feb

cessna310 2nd Feb 2007 20:47

Hi Professor,

I received email from CAE to update my cv on 24th but,still i am waiting a call from Ryan air for assesment.I heard that when u apply they put your name in list,when your name comes they will contact u.

Best Regards,
Good luck,
cessna310

cessna310 2nd Feb 2007 20:52

Hi Crashlanding,


When did u apply to CAE?
Best of luck,

Best regards,
cessna310.

Professor Rubik 2nd Feb 2007 21:47

Thanks for that info guys, it’s very re-assuring.

Cessna310 – I’ve been told the same thing as you’ve heard. All things being well it should be just a matter of waiting now. Fingers crossed.

High Wing Drifter – Excellent ! I remember that Fosters Ad well !!


Good luck to all of you with forthcoming assessments. Prepare well and be lucky.

Crashlanding 3rd Feb 2007 07:16

I applied to CAE at Xmas, got the email on 24th re CV

3 days ago got email about dates (all march) at EMA, replied with date of choice.

Reply came back saying got my date and on the -800 sim

Email was sent to 12 people, with there being 12 dates to pick.

Vortex Thing 4th Feb 2007 01:11

Ryanair Type Rating Courses
 
Guys and girls I had a very good talk with a good friend of mine who is with our flag carrier. He told me not to listen to a lot of the rumours about Ryanair which had until then put me off applying.

Let me set a few things straight before I start. I would like to explain that I have just joined Ryanair and amd therefore not guessing about how the contracts may or may not work.

There are a few people who have suggested that there is an age limit on my TR course there were 4 out of all of us who was below 25 the others were late twenties, early thirties and some in their 40s. The mix was good, ex mil, male, female, numerous nations and mother tongues, so age and diversity of background are not issues. Those who fell by the wayside on the way almost without exception did not have strong enough English, the SOPs are very particular and I as a Brit have to give tribute to those Spaniards, Frenchmen, Germans, Swedes etc who did get through because the nature of the task and the intensity of the TR course did not leave much room for error.

Re contracts there are numerous in this thread who say that you do not get your contract and or pay for 18 months. This is not true, they are making it up. Day 1 in our first week at East midlands when we did our induction, SEP and CRM we were given contracts for the TR phase and contracts for line training phase. Yes you may not know where you are going of the 18 current bases but hey its better than being unemployed (as a pilot).

The contracts told us how much we would get paid, when and why, when it would change, what we had to do and when and the last three courses above us have had to wait ohhh alomst a week for base training. The delays are gone, they are a thing of the past.

Line trainging locations are not specified but DUB and STN are fairly safe bets seeing as there are 500 pilots based at STN and 40 a/c.

So as long as you do not mind not knowing exactly where you will be based and accept that it will take 6-11 months (not 18) to get to full pay then I am not sure why people are making up the tripe that put me of joining for so long.

I expect a barrage of questions but frankly don't care if u are going to berate my firm then do it with knowledge not guesswork.

They are never going to look after me as much as many other firms but there is no deception in this. If you don't like it then don't join! Oh and yes in answer to many of the likely questions. Do I mind paying for my uniform, my own water on the flight deck, having no pension, etc well yes but not as much as I minded not even getting a response from many of the regional firms.

Before the Ryanair debate continues I suggest that somebody actually calculates how much they earn over a 3-4 year period if they were to join a regional turboprop Dash8 firm for three years and then join EJ or FR and just get on with it and joining of the bat. I'd suggest that 3-4yrs down the line with 2700hrs on a 738 you are going to be fairly safein gettin some work and used to all manner of approaches in Europe rather thatn RV to the ILS at EHAM.

If you take into account your lack of earnings with a turboprop operator I am surprised, in hindsight, that these deabtes dont start with why on earth would anyone join Flybe, Logan, etc rather than why would u take an alledged chance with FR.

Yes some people do not make it through the courses and line but hey lets be honest it wasnt because FR wanted to waste a line trg capts time knowing they would not progress.


So for all those in doubt. Don't listen to those above below or anyone else, me included just take it as info and make up your own mind. I have not met any of the 1600 pilots in FR who were desperately unhappy. Yes some were annoyed about basing and some about contracts but NONE of us in three courses were forced to go to Brookfields or Bond (except some JAR25 qualified skippers) and none of them were unhappy enough to leave and leave they can. Easy are offering interviews to those over 50hrs on type now so it would not be hard to jump ship. So why are FR pilots leaving? Ask yourself that.

So how bad is it really, I'd say it ain't bad at all. See you on the Abbot 1C:ugh:

Cojack 4th Feb 2007 14:46

Vortex Thing
 
Theres a pilot with a damn good attitude.

Fair play mate. I wish you all the best with your career.
An attitute like that, someone who does the back ground work, and believes the facts, not rumours, is chief pilot material.

F.O. 737-800 4th Feb 2007 15:44

Well said by Vortex, for a company to start in RyanAir is a great place to get a few hours on type then reconsider your options. Most of the Captains you fly with are good guys and the flying is very entertaining. A far better decisions than going to a Turbo Prop operator if you have the choice.

However the contract is very bad and you wont see full F.O. salary for 18 months after sighing your RYR contract and the chances are you will never see Senior F.O. money. Also as is well known in RYR you make your money on your Sector Pay rather than your basic salary, which in previous years meant as a S.O. with a poor basic salary you still made good money. However last year RYR over did it on F.O./S.O. recruitment and now due to the over staffing you will make less than the Number 1's even with your sector cheque. So as i say go to RYR get enough hours for Easy then leave. :)

Aloue 4th Feb 2007 19:53

Vortex Thing you have been nominated as material for a position as Chief Pilot. Congratulations. The person nominating you, and judging from your post, yourself are likely to be uninterested in anything that says differently. However I view your research efforts with some suspicion.

But for those reading your confident words - and it is for them that I am writing this - may I just point out that you have like everybody else received a

contract[s] for line training phase.
You seem to have missed what has been written about this. That is not your contract of employment. In fact you are "half-employed" by the only airline that has a contract for line training. I don't suppose you considered why you are on such a contract? Why would an employer have such a contract?

Now that you have paid your money you will learn the realities, especially when you get your Ryanair contract and start wondering how to interpret what it all means for you. You would know the answers to those questions if you had done your research (and what F.O. 737-800 says should point you in the correct direction).

If you had done that research and then decided it was for you, the perhaps you would be Chief Pilot material. To state so assertively that all will be well when you are only at the start of the process is certainly confident.

Let's hear from you in a year, as pressman suggests.

Fellow Aviator 4th Feb 2007 21:12

Vortex mentioned that the training contract states:

The contracts told us how much we would get paid, when and why, when it would change
What is the legal binding of this, if the contract of employment is not in par with terms stated in the training contract? Anyone? OTOH Fighting a big corporation in a court with my limited resources is one thing i wouldn't voluntairly do.

Vortex: Was there any mention in the training contract about pay during/after line training?

BBT 4th Feb 2007 22:26

Vortex Thing I too want to follow up on your remarkable post - remarkable for your apparent lack of insight on so many fronts. Maybe I am wrong, and if I am, I will apologise, but I thought that you guys had paid for a rating "up front". So when you say

Yes some people do not make it through the courses and line but hey lets be honest it wasnt because FR wanted to waste a line trg capts time knowing they would not progress.
Ahh.... so you identify with Ryanair's interests, but not with those who paid for a rating and contributed to Ryanair's profits? Any half decent employer has a commitment to those they employ (not least because they are not a source of profit in their training) and tend to help those people, especially when they have problems.

I presume that if you had failed you would have the same attitude and would willingly kissed your money goodbye. Of course you would. Not a word of complaint. Yea.

V1 Rotate! 6th Feb 2007 13:35

BBT,

I fully agree with you. The majority of Pilots out there today have spent so much money just getting their licence, only to add insult to injury by being hammered for a substantial sum of money to have the 'honour' of flying for FR!

Yes, I will single out Ryanair because they were the one's who created this wonderful idea. Can you just imagine it? all those brown tongues falling over themselves to impress MOL "Oh Please Michael, I have an idea! Lets charge those glorified bus drivers for the type-rating...after all, we passed the buck when it was a requirement for all new crew to have an MCC!"
Other Airlines looking on couldn't believe the gaul of Mr O Leary, but then thought.....jeez he's actually pulled it off, these guys are actually paying! Let's do it, the precident is set.

So when O'Leary insults his new 'Boeing bus-drivers' by making them live off a wage whereby their take-home pay barely takes them home!!....well thats when the fun is taken out of flying and the job becomes a 'vocation' with a difference!

Ah, that was so nice to get off my chest, now can anyone lend me E30-40k for a type-rating, I'm good for it...honest Guv'!


;)

scroggs 6th Feb 2007 14:32

Actually, I think Ryanair were nowhere near the first to charge for a TR. If I remember correctly, the practice was established in the '80s , long before FR came to prominence. Even BA effectively charged their cadets for the TR, paying them a reduced salary for the first 7 years.

Scroggs

Aloue 6th Feb 2007 18:54


Even BA effectively charged their cadets for the TR, paying them a reduced salary for the first 7 years.
Scroggs comparing Ryanair to BA in this regard is very misleading indeed. In fact it suggests you have no grasp of how far beyond the traditional cadet scheme Ryanair has gone. There is a phenomenal difference between the two schemes, well documented on posts to be found in this and other threads.

Studsgaard 8th Feb 2007 13:43

Latest assessment
 
Anyone to share some information about recent assessments?
I know they held one yesterday at EMA.

Diogo 8th Feb 2007 15:15

Ryanair SIM assessment and interview
 
I have also been "invited" for sim assessment at ryanair next march...would also like to receive some gouging on recent assessments

Thank you

Sky Goose 8th Feb 2007 15:47

Went to an assessment yesterday. (EMA)

No tricks,

SID, Steep turns, minor failure, NDB DME back in.

Personal and tech interview combined and very casual.

I'm through and completely over the moon.

Cheers
Goose

Diogo 8th Feb 2007 17:29

Any gouging on both tech and personal interviews?like questions asked etc..

sam34 8th Feb 2007 17:35

could you inform me?
 
Ok I read a lot things about Ryanair and Easy Jet.

I wonder what happens if I do not pass the type rating (ryanair) with for example CAE ?

I ask that because if I understood, easy jet repay us our bond less an excess of 5000 £ I think... so around 17000 £.

so it is the same thing about Ryanair? or we lose all our money... :sad:

is there any bond with Ryanair ?

thanks a lot!


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