FAA or EASA ATPL(H)
There is the multi pilot helicopter thing in the regs. Who flies multi pilots ops ? First and foremost oil & gas. Very few VIP ops maybe.
A mere mortal will not be able to self fund a type rating on a MPH, let alone 350 hours after that. With the shortage of airline pilots some helicopter guys might have gone the transit route
but there are still plenty of highly eperienced guys looking for work.
You might want to get in line and draw a number.
A mere mortal will not be able to self fund a type rating on a MPH, let alone 350 hours after that. With the shortage of airline pilots some helicopter guys might have gone the transit route
but there are still plenty of highly eperienced guys looking for work.
You might want to get in line and draw a number.
To the OP - an ATPL is not a licence that you train for ab-initio. You initially train for a CPL and then qualify for an ATPL once certain experience requirements are satisfied.
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Question should be:
Where do you have the right to work (and live)?
As a European pilot, it is almost (not fully, but almost) impossible to get a work permit in the US......
As a US pilot, it is almost (not fully, but almost) impossible to get a work permit in Europe...
Where do you have the right to work (and live)?
As a European pilot, it is almost (not fully, but almost) impossible to get a work permit in the US......
As a US pilot, it is almost (not fully, but almost) impossible to get a work permit in Europe...
Go fixed wing, there's money to be made in the East side.
You can get an FAA ATP with ME and a (relatively) heavy TR (A320 family, B737) for chips compared to the cost of a EASA ATPL(H) with any valuable TR on it.
You can get an FAA ATP with ME and a (relatively) heavy TR (A320 family, B737) for chips compared to the cost of a EASA ATPL(H) with any valuable TR on it.
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FAA ATPL for Int’l Ops
I’ve been involved in the industry actively working/flying for the past 40+ years and am currently Captain on both the AW139 & B412 operating offshore in the Persian Gulf.
Holding both FW & RW ATPL’s (FAA & Canadian) I was also previously type-ck’d as Capt on the B737 back in the mid 1990’s. (Not current at present)
Having left Canada in ‘96, I’ve worked the past 23 years continuously in the helicopter offshore oil & gas industry in Qatar, KSA, UAE, Nigeria, Canada, India, Yemen.
If your plans are to work as an expat overseas for global operators (FW & RW) not including Europe, the most valuable license that you can get yourself where you’ll make the most $$$$ will be the FAA ATPL.
The company that I currently work for in the UAE can’t find enough “qualified” offshore Captains. We’re about 15 guys short. What is “qualified” you ask...? Mid-Late 30’s, FAA ATPL, 5,000+ Hrs, Offshore Oil & Gas experience, multi-crew ops, multi-eng experience ie Bell212, Bell412, AW139.
That all said, your getting an FAA FW ATPL and throwing in a B737 type-ck (B737-300 Non-Glass cockpit at $10,000USD approx) will certainly fast track you to where you want to get to. Don’t worry about the Glass cockpit. The employer only wants to see the type-ck on the license. The airline will put you through a Glass Transition Course.
If your plans are to work in Europe, disregard all the above.....
Good luck.....
Holding both FW & RW ATPL’s (FAA & Canadian) I was also previously type-ck’d as Capt on the B737 back in the mid 1990’s. (Not current at present)
Having left Canada in ‘96, I’ve worked the past 23 years continuously in the helicopter offshore oil & gas industry in Qatar, KSA, UAE, Nigeria, Canada, India, Yemen.
If your plans are to work as an expat overseas for global operators (FW & RW) not including Europe, the most valuable license that you can get yourself where you’ll make the most $$$$ will be the FAA ATPL.
The company that I currently work for in the UAE can’t find enough “qualified” offshore Captains. We’re about 15 guys short. What is “qualified” you ask...? Mid-Late 30’s, FAA ATPL, 5,000+ Hrs, Offshore Oil & Gas experience, multi-crew ops, multi-eng experience ie Bell212, Bell412, AW139.
That all said, your getting an FAA FW ATPL and throwing in a B737 type-ck (B737-300 Non-Glass cockpit at $10,000USD approx) will certainly fast track you to where you want to get to. Don’t worry about the Glass cockpit. The employer only wants to see the type-ck on the license. The airline will put you through a Glass Transition Course.
If your plans are to work in Europe, disregard all the above.....
Good luck.....
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The company that I currently work for in the UAE can’t find enough “qualified” offshore Captains.
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Simple explanation. All Aramco aircraft are “N” registered. In order to fly any American “N” registered aircraft worldwide, the crew must hold an FAA ATPL.
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Guys who have the experience and the brains, are all going elsewhere.....
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I never said 40 was too old. Hell, I’m 60 and still flying an 8/4 rotation.
It’s HR and the CFO who want to hire younger crews because they can get them at much lower salaries. The more experienced and slightly older guys are going elsewhere.
It’s HR and the CFO who want to hire younger crews because they can get them at much lower salaries. The more experienced and slightly older guys are going elsewhere.
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If you have the AW139 stamped on your FAA ATPL, no problem. With the exception of Europe, you can go anywhere.