EvilEagle
Pattern Altitude
I'm at about 4300 total. Likely to increase with the new job (Delta).
Congrats! My dad flies the 737 for Delta. What plane are you on?I'm at about 4300 total. Likely to increase with the new job (Delta).
I think it is good to see 66% of respondents less than 1,000 hours.I know a lot of student pilots solo, but never get their ticket.
I know a lot of private pilots get their ticket, then hardly ever fly again.
I know a lot of private pilots fly quite a bit for a short while after getting their ticket, then taper off to little or nothing.
I know a lot of pilots go on to have aviation careers and fly regularly and frequently.
I'd be curious to know what the distribution of total hours flown is across the pilot population. (I'd be further curious to see it broken down by pilot age, by how long a pilot's held a certificate, by highest rating, and all sorts of other criteria as well.)
Do such data exist, and are they publicly available for review?
yup....+600 hrs TT...and 30 years of flying. I'm happy with ~30hrs a year. :wink2:Just passed 200 hours over 4 years of flying. I'm your generic 50 hour a year guy!
yup....+600 hrs TT...and 30 years of flying. I'm happy with ~30hrs a year.
Remember.....it quality over quantity.....but, quantity does help too. :wink2:
My last medical was in 1979.Total hours are reported in every medical. This data has to exist, at least at that time.
For us old farts, it's no more than two years old. One for commercial pilots, 0.5 for ATPs.
I thought the same.Pretty even spread so far.
Congrats! My dad flies the 737 for Delta. What plane are you on?
Funny, I have one with all three of those times logged in the same book.I keep 3 logbooks. Civilian, Air Force, Air Force pilot training
Awesome, my dad is based is NYC also. Good luckI'll be on the 7ER (757/767) in NYC.
yup....+600 hrs TT...and 30 years of flying. I'm happy with ~30hrs a year. :wink2:
Remember.....it's quality over quantity.....but, quantity does help too.
There you go. Privett, stop giving me advice about flying, you are just an amateur. You've barely got half the time of that guy.John Edward "Ed" Long, Jr. (1915–July 18, 1999) was an American pilot who is in the Guinness Book of Records for the most flight time by a pilot: over 65,000 hours (more than seven years and four months) at the time of his death.
John Edward "Ed" Long, Jr. (1915–July 18, 1999) was an American pilot who is in the Guinness Book of Records for the most flight time by a pilot: over 65,000 hours (more than seven years and four months) at the time of his death.
He began in 1933 at the age of 17, when he too his first and only flying lesson. In September 1989, he broke the previous record, 52,929 hours, set by Max Conrad in 1974. According to his brother, Ed Long's job involved checking power lines, so "most of that was under 200 feet, in a Piper Cub". He died in 1999 at the age of 83.
Long was inducted into the Alabama Aviation Hall of Fame.
I stopped totaling my hours about 20 years ago when I had 8500ish and got hired at my current airline.
I average about 650-700 hours per year, so I am well over 20K, probably closer to 22k-23k.
I've been wondering about that. I have a logbook entry for every flight in the military and civilian world so far. I like to look back occasionally and see when a trip was or where I was flying on a certain date. Now that I'm with Delta, I'm undecided on whether to try to keep up or not. I think it'd be cool to have one day but I also know I don't really need it.
Never go into the airline industry thinking your job (even with a Major) is secure. You can't predict the future.
You may need that logbook for another job down the road. Either keep the log or get monthly print outs from scheduling.
Hi guys... I'm new here and not sure where to introduce myself.Never go into the airline industry thinking your job (even with a Major) is secure. You can't predict the future.
You may need that logbook for another job down the road. Either keep the log or get monthly print outs from scheduling.