MyDimeIsUp
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2019
- Messages
- 131
- Display Name
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Hello all,
I'm going to be a sophomore starting this fall in computer science. I love programming, been doing it since I was a kid, but the aviation bug bit me as well and is what I want to do as a career. However paying for college as well as flight training is just not possible. With rising gas prices and the huge demand for pilots right now, my parents and I have considered doing one more year of college to get credits, score a summer 2023 internship since software engineer internships usually pay > $30/hr, and then doing flight training full time in fall 2023. We are considering this now since the price of gas is going up and seems to keep going up and inflation is eventually going to catch up to every aspect of life, making it more expensive. The thinking is why not dive in now while training is cheap relative to everything else before flight training costs start going up rapidly too. After building hours and going regional (or corporate who knows, maybe I'll change my mind and be enlightened) I just wrap up 2 years of college to get a bachelor's to make it to mainline AA, DAL, or UAL + have a backup plan God forbid I lose my medical and can't fly anmore.
I was wondering what everyone thinks about flight training cost, the price of gas associated with it, and trying to get into an airline while the pilot demand is still astronomically high. If I were to finish college, I'd graduate 2025, want to work for a year or two to build money, flight train in 2027, build hours, and only then get my foot into an airline in 2029. Not sure if I can wait until 2027 to fly and by 2029 if the pilot demand at regionals will be as high as they are now. It seems right now if you have all ratings and a pulse they'll hire you. I fought the FAA with my ADHD and ASD diagnosis thousands of dollars and now I've just been sitting on a 1st class medical for over 2 years and haven't even started training due to the cost of college. Its been irritating me and really want to fly.
Thanks all.
I'm going to be a sophomore starting this fall in computer science. I love programming, been doing it since I was a kid, but the aviation bug bit me as well and is what I want to do as a career. However paying for college as well as flight training is just not possible. With rising gas prices and the huge demand for pilots right now, my parents and I have considered doing one more year of college to get credits, score a summer 2023 internship since software engineer internships usually pay > $30/hr, and then doing flight training full time in fall 2023. We are considering this now since the price of gas is going up and seems to keep going up and inflation is eventually going to catch up to every aspect of life, making it more expensive. The thinking is why not dive in now while training is cheap relative to everything else before flight training costs start going up rapidly too. After building hours and going regional (or corporate who knows, maybe I'll change my mind and be enlightened) I just wrap up 2 years of college to get a bachelor's to make it to mainline AA, DAL, or UAL + have a backup plan God forbid I lose my medical and can't fly anmore.
I was wondering what everyone thinks about flight training cost, the price of gas associated with it, and trying to get into an airline while the pilot demand is still astronomically high. If I were to finish college, I'd graduate 2025, want to work for a year or two to build money, flight train in 2027, build hours, and only then get my foot into an airline in 2029. Not sure if I can wait until 2027 to fly and by 2029 if the pilot demand at regionals will be as high as they are now. It seems right now if you have all ratings and a pulse they'll hire you. I fought the FAA with my ADHD and ASD diagnosis thousands of dollars and now I've just been sitting on a 1st class medical for over 2 years and haven't even started training due to the cost of college. Its been irritating me and really want to fly.
Thanks all.