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Instructor lying about helicopter pilot salary?

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Instructor lying about helicopter pilot salary?

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Old 11th Feb 2012, 23:29
  #21 (permalink)  
 
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Depends on the contractor, but typically 95% or more are exmilitary or govt employee and 100% are US Citizens so Green Card holder won't cut it due to security clearance issues.

I worked alongside a contractor, and they had 14 pilots. 13 were former military, 12 of those military were former military pilots. The non military guy had over 10,000 hours before he got hired.
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Old 11th Feb 2012, 23:58
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Just a bit more on the pay rates in Oz, which are significantly higher than UnZed: offshore Captains are around $A170k, CP salaries well north of that, same for Check & Training. EMS around $120k+ for SP/IFR, similar for Police.

Again, the OP's brother needs a reality check with a 2 x 4 if he is believing what was quoted
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Old 12th Feb 2012, 10:06
  #23 (permalink)  
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Ye, I thought so. Shame that - don't really fancy a military career haha
SASless, in the US an FAA is the licence equivalent to a JAA? I heard, though, that a JAA licence is more desirable because of the higher standards... No disrespect, this is just what I'm hearing from other people!
You're right Squeaks, he is 'getting the urine extracted' and he does need a reality check lol I will get him to read all the posts on this thread so he can see from the first-hand guys what the deal is

Cheers
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Old 12th Feb 2012, 10:17
  #24 (permalink)  
 
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Here we go again...

Higher standards?
I live in both systems, the JAA teaches you rocket science, the FAA teaches you flying.
The FAA certificate (it's not a license) makes you more employable than the JAA thing when it comes to world wide employment. Exceptions apply.
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Old 12th Feb 2012, 10:51
  #25 (permalink)  
 
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The JAA licence is simply more expensive and takes longer to get. That has nothing to do with standards, and everything to do with protectionism and European bureaucracy. It is relatively cheap to convert a JAA pilots licence to an FAA certificate, and very expensive to go the other way. That's probably why someone might have called it more "desirable".

The real catch is the working visa. If you aren't legally able to work in the EU or in FAA-Land, neither one of these licences will help.
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Old 12th Feb 2012, 16:45
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100% are US Citizens
Not true.

that a JAA licence is more desirable because of the higher standards
Theoretical standards - yes. Practical standards - not particularly. A JAR licence is desirable because it is then a very simple process to convert to another licence. Other licence holders are not happy with this because they don't want to have to study to the depth that JAR licence holders do, or pay the associated costs.
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Old 13th Feb 2012, 08:24
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Highest salary I have come across in the Uk is: Bristows TRE offshore on £117,000 gross. Met police CP: £100,000.
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Old 13th Feb 2012, 08:58
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I wasn't suggesting that JAA licenses are better or that JAA-license-holders get paid more, just that to be eligable for the job I used as an illustration required a JAA license. As the original post had a figure in £, I assumed you were talking about a UK-based job (or at least one involving working for a UK company). The figure quoted was about right, if you reduce it by a factor of 10.

I have no idea whether there are any JAA-authorised schools in NZ (and I don't care enough to go dig out the list from the CAA website). As per my last post, I'm not aware of any (AFAIK, Bristow is the only non-EU JAA helicopter school).

In short, get whatever license is used by wherever you wish to work. This is often dictated by where you plan to work. If you wish (and are allowed) to work in the EU, you need a JAA license. Ditto FAA for the USA. For a lot of the touring places (Africa, etc), it doesn't seem to make a lot of difference - the companies involved will sort out a local validation of whatever you have.
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Old 13th Feb 2012, 09:01
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How times change. When I moved to Australia I took a big pay and conditions drop now the opposite is the case. Pilots in Australia, particularly offshore are some of the worlds best paid. That and the tax laws change mean that you rarely meet Australian pilots overseas these days.
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Old 13th Feb 2012, 10:06
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@Epi

Tell me, ATPL-H licence conversion from european JAR to CASA, is it complicated?

JR
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Old 13th Feb 2012, 10:50
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CASA conversion is not so difficult. Getting residency and a job offer if you are not a born and bred Aussie........ That's another story!
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Old 13th Feb 2012, 11:26
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Which is just the way it should be Kelly and Europe could learn much from the Australian immigration system.I was lucky and my wife got a job there.

Rules change Jetranger and your best bet is to look at the CASA website or contact them. I had to sit Air Law, Irex, do 3 hours of flying including a flight test and instrument rating test.
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Old 13th Feb 2012, 16:14
  #33 (permalink)  
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OK I get you now - the JAA licence is more expensive and bureaucratic than the FAA certificate. That said, it all depends on where you want to work and if you later need to convert.
And for that reason - I would opt for a JAA, even if that means taking out a loan and having to pay money back. I think it would maybe benefit me in the future Didn't mean to cause a stir haha

Thanks
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