bbbb said:
Perhaps getting a Private Pilot License or commercial license would be the best way to go? With one of those you can actually FLY PLANES instead of waiting and doing non-pilot related 'training'. It takes a long time for pilot hopefuls to get their wings and start actually flying for the CF. The possibility of failing that 'training' kills your chances of becoming a CF pilot even before getting into a cockpit. A lot of people have experienced this situation, they enter the CF as pilot 32U and NEVER fly any CF plane because of 'training' that HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH FLYING!! Many people have gone this way...
The way I see it, if you want to be a pilot, get your pilot license that way when you apply for CF pilot you actually have that skill already under your belt. 1. This talk of bad habits during flight training is absolute nonsense. 2. Anybody who passes the flight test and flies properly isn't displaying bad habits. 3. For the people reading these posts up above, perhaps a description of the 'bad habits' PPL people have is in order? I for one did well on my flight test and can fly a plane without any of the sloppy habits some people attach to PPL and CPL pilots. 4. It has been my experience that CPL pilots are awesome pilots. For those people who say that the flight test is not strict, flying a Cessna 150/172 is WAY different from flying a CF-18 or Herc.
I'm thinking I should change my signature to "Get your Pilot License if you want to be a pilot!".
"...my buddy..." hmmmmmm :
bbbb, I don't want to scare you away from contributing on this board, but please keep in mind that it is a generally accepted practice here to back up what you are purporting to be factual statements with experience/evidence. Until you have established a posting rapore with others on the board here, you have to be clear on what you state as fact and what is conjecture/opinion. If you are stating an "emotional" opinion, vice factual statement, say so.
To address some of your statements (per inserted numbers, highlighted in red, above):
1) As an example, as a CF pilot with thousands of hours of flight time (albeit not as a QFI - qualified flight instructor), I have spoken with many instructors in the training system who have noted that many civy-trained pilots thought that "being in the general vicinity of altitudes" was sufficient. This is clearly not on for military flying. +/-20' of an assigned altitude may seem okay, but now put yourself at 15' AGL on NVGs and see if +/- 20' works out for you!
2) As the holder of a CPLH, I can tell you that the test was not nearly as discriminating as you make it out to be. Your statement logically indicates that any holder of a PPL or CPL would not have habits 'bad enough' to be unsatisfactory in meeting military standards -- I do not think that is the case. They could very well have bad habits that happened to be acceptable within the standards laid out for the civilian license, but clearly don't make the grade in military aviation.
3) see 1)
4) My experience has been that while there are some military pilots that are not as good as others, I have never met another CF pilot I wouldn't either fly with myself, or have fly my family. On the other hand, I have seen some pilots in the commercial world I would have nothing to do with -- flew with some during a summer that I took leave and used my CPLH for a few weeks. In fact, as an Instrument Check Pilot (meaning the guy who tests another CF pilot for his/her annual "ticket ride") I stripped one pilot of their ticket for what would have (if I hadn't taken control of the aircraft) resulted in a serious violation of Cdn Air Regs -- the guy was an ATPL-qualified pilot in his civy life flying for a well known national airline, it was not a mil-only item he failed on...it was flagrant lack of common sense and judgement!
For others, I would suggest some familiarization training with a flight instructor at a reputable flight school, but I would not go so far as to recommend getting a private pilots license and the significant cost that can entail. Having a private pilots license is not directly correlative to success in military pilot training. If you have the potential that the military is looking for in a pilot, you will succeed. I think there are very few cases where having a PPL in and of itself made or broke a potential CF pilot's chances.
Cheers,
Duey