Chi said:
On a slightly different note, can anyone who's gone the same route to be a pilot share some of their experience? If you entered RMC for ROTP to be a pilot, where are you now and what was your journey like?
I went through RMC (Mech Eng '06 Grad) and got my wings recently, so I can share some recent insight on the process. I am in Cold Lake, Alberta right now and the journey
was IS amazing. But it isn't a walk in the park.
Chi said:
The recruiter put it simply to me - 4 years RMC, 2 years flight training, 5 years service. That's great.
Not quite. 4 years RMC. Wait for 1-1.5 years, 1.5-2 years flight training (depending what stream you go onto) then you owe 7 years of service once you get your wings (maybe 9 years now??)
Chi said:
But I know how few people actually make the pilot out of the pool.
I'll give you a quick review of what happen on my phases. First, Aircrew Selection. We went there 11 guys, 4 passed for pilot and were sent to Toronto for the full aircrew medical. 1 failed the aircrew medical. So, 3 made it out of 11.
On Primary Flight Training, in Portage-La-Prairie, 5 failed out of 25.
On Basic Flight Training, 1 failed and 2 quit the program out of 8. So 5 made it out of 8.
On Subsequent phases, no one failed.
So, if you do the math, that's a 13.6% pass rate, the killer being Aircrew Selection. After aircrew selection, the pass rate is 50%. I did the jet route and things may be different for other streams, and this is only during my own personnal progression.
Chi said:
What happens to the rest?
If they have mandatory service (which you will, after RMC you owe 5 years), you have to re-muster to a different trade and finish your 5 years (that's mandatory. They won't let you release until your 5 years it up). If they don't have mandatory service, they can ask for a release or re-muster.
Chi said:
Do you get to go through flight training and get your licence even if you don't "make" pilot? So perhaps after service you can convert it and go for pilot outside of the military? Sorry if these are too basic, any insight would help.
The military trains pilots for its own organisation, not for civilian streets. If you fail, I don't see why we should still throw money at your flight training (which is millions of dollars, by the way). If you want to pursue the civilian way, you'll have to do it on your dime.
Max