NealRomeoGolf
Final Approach
So here is my own thread on quitting a cubicle (office) job and flying for a living. Probably just midlife crisis musings rather than reality.
I'm a 170 hour pilot. There are days I hate my job. There are weeks like next week that will push 70 hours. The bright side is I get paid really well. So well that I have saved enough to do one of two things. I can quit my job for a year and fly dogs "for a living" or I can buy a 1980s vintage A36.
The irrational side of my brain says I quit my job (in a few years after returning from my overseas assignment) and fly 30 hours a week and in a year (give or take) I hit 1500 hours. If I am loving it by the end of the year, maybe I get a job flying. If I don't, I go back to working the office job.
Obviously I won't have a dispatch rate to keep up with 30 hours of flying each week. And maybe there aren't enough dogs to fly around to give me 30 hours a week. But I bet there are. I fly an Archer. It is slow. I can cross the country plenty of times with dogs and tack on the hours. I also have siblings on both coasts. Lots of people I can visit.
I am a fairly risk averse person when it comes to money. I guess that makes me a good accountant. Quitting my job and not having an income would freak me out. But I LOVE flying dogs around.
I would get some ratings along the way too. First would be instrument. Would be smart to get it started before quitting my job. If I want 30 hours a week I definitely can't get them all VFR. To get a flying job I would also need to get my commercial and multi of course. I just have no desire to get my CFI and instruct to build hours. So yeah, me ever getting to 1500 hours will have to happen on my own dime the hard way.
Challenges:
Flying this much I would be changing the oil every two weeks. Better learn to do it myself.
My engine is past 1200 hours already. Depending on how well things go, an engine overhaul may bite me in the middle of the adventure. But this engine has been real solid and the current oil analysis looks really good.
Winter. Probably not going to get 30 hours a week during the winter since I am based out of Illinois. Perhaps I can pick up some financial consulting gigs during the winter to be able to extend my flying past a year.
Dispatch rate. So far my plane has been very reliable in the 2 years I have owned it. But what happens when you really make it work hard?
Fatigue. I have never tried to fly 30 hours in a week. Could I keep it up week after week?
And the biggest challenge: getting the wife to agree to any of this. I could mitigate some of her concerns by limiting my radius so that I am home most nights. This would mean a 3 hour trip radius to get 6 hours per day. But that would then limit the availability of dogs. It would be much more fun to pick up pups all over the country so I could put in some long hour days and also see the country from 7,000 feet.
So much of this is unrealistic, but hey, put your dreaming hat on. If you could take a year off of work and do nothing but leisurely fly around with canine passengers, would you do it?
Then there is option 2. Keep the job and buy an A36. I could continue to fly dogs on the weekends and have a fun fast plane. I can retire at 55 (which is 15 years out) and then fly dogs all I want.
Really this is just the midlife crisis talking, but thought I would put my thoughts out there for your entertainment and comments. Pour it on boys and girls.
I'm a 170 hour pilot. There are days I hate my job. There are weeks like next week that will push 70 hours. The bright side is I get paid really well. So well that I have saved enough to do one of two things. I can quit my job for a year and fly dogs "for a living" or I can buy a 1980s vintage A36.
The irrational side of my brain says I quit my job (in a few years after returning from my overseas assignment) and fly 30 hours a week and in a year (give or take) I hit 1500 hours. If I am loving it by the end of the year, maybe I get a job flying. If I don't, I go back to working the office job.
Obviously I won't have a dispatch rate to keep up with 30 hours of flying each week. And maybe there aren't enough dogs to fly around to give me 30 hours a week. But I bet there are. I fly an Archer. It is slow. I can cross the country plenty of times with dogs and tack on the hours. I also have siblings on both coasts. Lots of people I can visit.
I am a fairly risk averse person when it comes to money. I guess that makes me a good accountant. Quitting my job and not having an income would freak me out. But I LOVE flying dogs around.
I would get some ratings along the way too. First would be instrument. Would be smart to get it started before quitting my job. If I want 30 hours a week I definitely can't get them all VFR. To get a flying job I would also need to get my commercial and multi of course. I just have no desire to get my CFI and instruct to build hours. So yeah, me ever getting to 1500 hours will have to happen on my own dime the hard way.
Challenges:
Flying this much I would be changing the oil every two weeks. Better learn to do it myself.
My engine is past 1200 hours already. Depending on how well things go, an engine overhaul may bite me in the middle of the adventure. But this engine has been real solid and the current oil analysis looks really good.
Winter. Probably not going to get 30 hours a week during the winter since I am based out of Illinois. Perhaps I can pick up some financial consulting gigs during the winter to be able to extend my flying past a year.
Dispatch rate. So far my plane has been very reliable in the 2 years I have owned it. But what happens when you really make it work hard?
Fatigue. I have never tried to fly 30 hours in a week. Could I keep it up week after week?
And the biggest challenge: getting the wife to agree to any of this. I could mitigate some of her concerns by limiting my radius so that I am home most nights. This would mean a 3 hour trip radius to get 6 hours per day. But that would then limit the availability of dogs. It would be much more fun to pick up pups all over the country so I could put in some long hour days and also see the country from 7,000 feet.
So much of this is unrealistic, but hey, put your dreaming hat on. If you could take a year off of work and do nothing but leisurely fly around with canine passengers, would you do it?
Then there is option 2. Keep the job and buy an A36. I could continue to fly dogs on the weekends and have a fun fast plane. I can retire at 55 (which is 15 years out) and then fly dogs all I want.
Really this is just the midlife crisis talking, but thought I would put my thoughts out there for your entertainment and comments. Pour it on boys and girls.