![]() |
|
Pilot training - Printable Version +- Airline Enterprise - Forums (https://www.airlineenterprise.com/forums) +-- Forum: Community (https://www.airlineenterprise.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=6) +--- Forum: Aviation (https://www.airlineenterprise.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Thread: Pilot training (/showthread.php?tid=958) |
Pilot training - Dokhu - 02-28-2019 Hello everyone. Could you tell me how many flight hours a pilot needs to become a captain and if it is possible for a pilot to fly a real aircraft after receiving training only in high level simulators? Thanks in advance. RE: Pilot training - Zortan - 02-28-2019 It depends on the airline. If you are flying for SkyWest (a US regional carrier), for example, it'll probably take you between 2-4 years to upgrade to captain from first officer depending on how much you work. You cannot get a pilot license (at least in the US or Canada) without flying an actual plane. Simulators may be good, but flying is always better. In Canada, I believe you need 35 hours of time with an instructor in a plane plus maybe an additional 70 or something solo in a plane. RE: Pilot training - Anzatax - 02-28-2019 Simulators nowadays are powerful, but nothing beats the real thing . You've got to really feel a plane in the air to know what it is like.
RE: Pilot training - WhiteFright - 02-28-2019 In the U.S., it's 1500 hours to get hired at an airline, though there are exceptions to make that number lower (about 1,100 hours iirc) if you go through a university program to earn your ATP cert. However, you'd most likely be hired as a first officer at a regional airline first, move to captain at that airline, get hired as a first officer to a mainline airline, and then become captain at that carrier. RE: Pilot training - Unknown98 - 03-02-2019 I think the only way you'd fly a real aircraft without any formal training is to buy one of those flight experience packages that allow you to fly a Cessna or other light aircraft |