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Jul 8 2005, 08:55 AM
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Cessna 152 Member

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Member No.: 1,770

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Im sure there is no correct answer but here goes. from an industry stand point which is the best airline acadamy? right now i have my private rating and am currently working on my instrument. after that I am thinking about ATP, comair, or Regional Airline Acadamy. which is the best route???
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Jul 8 2005, 09:39 AM
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Boeing 737 Member
  
Group: Full Access Members
Posts: 197
Joined: 17-February 05
From: Long Island, New york
Member No.: 834

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LOL that's funny I have all three of those schools pamphlets in my room. I think the one with the Best offer is ATP but here is the rundown.
ATP
Course:Airline Career Pilot Program(ACPP)&Direct Track Placement
Will take you from Private Pilot to Certified Flight Instructor with approximately 190 hours of multi-engine time.You have two choices 90 day fast Track or 10 months(free housing).Direct Track is the new airline placement option following the Airline Career Pilot Program. Direct Track provides the fastest way to go from Airline Career Pilot Program graduate to Airline Pilot without flight instructing.Your success in receiving a Regional Airline First Officer job offer is backed by ATP’s exclusive $10,000 rebate guarantee and a guaranteed multi-engine instructor position with ATP.
Aircraft:65 PA-44 seminoles,2 diamond stars(13 on order),16 C-172, Cessna 525 and 501 jets
Price: ACPP=$39,995 DTP=$32,995 Total=$77,985
Comair Academy<--My Favorite
Course:I have recently been getting flyers in the mail from these guys with pics of 777's and 767's that say" We have all the connections" and "Being a subsidiary of Delta, we are now the ONLY accelerated flight training facility serving the entire Delta Connection System." They probably do but I want to see how manypeople were hired by Comair or one of the others. A student taking the traditional program graduates witha minimum of 1000hrs TT, there is the advanced program -10 plus 4 that does the same thing as traditional but gets you out quicker.You can work as a flight instructor and enjoy the benefits of a paid employee of Delta-with free 1st class flights to anywhere Delta flies(An offer I wouldn't mind taking up). And when your finished the hiring airlinepays $20,000 dollars for your First officer training.
Aircraft:More than 110 in total, Piper PA-44,some multi engine ones, and some nice new ones
Price: $53,000 (+or-)
Regoinal Airline Academy
Course:My first impression was how could all of their graduates have an airline job and they only have about 6 planes at each campus.But then I found out that you have your choice of three different regional aircraft ratings included in your training. To tell you the truth I think they have a good offer but I wouldn't apply unless any of my first choicesdidn't work out. But if RAA is "your school", then nevertheless apply apply apply! Just so you know----"Regional Airline Academy has alliances with regional airlines that guarantee interviews for graduates. We offer college degrees and financial aid along with Flight Attendant Training."
Aircraft:22 total aircraft including PA28s, PA28Rs, PA32s and C152s
Price:$45,000(+or-)
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Jul 8 2005, 01:58 PM
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Space Shuttle Member
     
Group: FL350 CREW
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Joined: 31-January 05
From: MZB345R@8DME
Member No.: 695

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QUOTE(paskoo) ...from an industry stand point which is the best airline acadamy?
There really isn't a 'best' academy to get to an airline.
Unless you are trying to use that route to get that promised interview with their affiliated regional, it does not matter where you did your training. Your licenses & certificates don't come with a brand name on them. It doesn't matter to a recruiter where you got them. The big marketing ploy of the acadamies is their interview hook up. 'Spend a gazillion dollars here and land an airline job in 18 months!' All you get for your $50-60K or more is an guaranteed interview- not a guaranteed job. So you can get an interview at reduced flight times by spending your money there, but if you don't get a job offer you are screwed as you are out the money and aren't qualified to apply any place else as your TT is so low.
Comair is now the Delta Connection Academy. You should expect a bunch of great, glossy flyers from schools like that and the RAA as they need students! They need slick marketing to keep a steady source of income for their high priced school. This forum is great, but it's not the place to get the real 411 on acadamy programs. You need to visit the message boards at http://forums.jetcareers.com or http://forum.flightinfo.com. (Jetcareers has folders for each of these schools by name.) Do a name search and you will find days of reading between these two sites.
DCA claims they place 97% of those that "complete their program". That is not 97% of those who enroll. Read this post about DCA that took a hit at their claim:
"“Even in today’s job market, 97% of our graduates are hired as First Officers!*”
The asterisk * small print at the bottom of [DCAs] ads reads: “* 728 out of 754 students who completed the entire program through August 2003”. Wow, that is fantastic, don’t you know? DCA has been in business since 1987, which is 16 years. If you divide 728 by that 16 years you only get 45.5 students per year, or 3 students per month on average, that graduate. This means less than 6% of their students make it as First Officers. Do you really want to spend all that money to attend DCA, knowing that only 6% or less of the attending students are hired as First Officers?"
-taken from this thread Thoughts on DCA
My Experience at DCA
And while you are looking, don't forget investigating the Mesa Pilot Development Program. My friend just went through their PACE program (having entered it with 350TT, and the Commercial, Multi, Instrument done at a local flight school for less), got an interview and was put in an RJ ground school this week.
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Jul 9 2005, 10:06 AM
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Boeing 737 Member
  
Group: Full Access Members
Posts: 197
Joined: 17-February 05
From: Long Island, New york
Member No.: 834

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QUOTE And while you are looking, don't forget investigating the Mesa Pilot Development Program. My friend just went through their PACE program (having entered it with 350TT, and the Commercial, Multi, Instrument done at a local flight school for less), got an interview and was put in an RJ ground school this week.
Your friend went through the PACE program and has a job?
I went on the site and it says you need an associate's degree to enroll.
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Jul 10 2005, 12:19 AM
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Cessna 152 Member

Group: Members
Posts: 13
Joined: 8-July 05
Member No.: 1,770

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I'm not sure if the question was directed to me, but yes I already have a bachelor of science. This is finally the career I need to be in, but getting married and kids can change ones life plans drastically
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Aug 18 2005, 05:52 PM
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Cessna 152 Member

Group: Members
Posts: 2
Joined: 24-July 05
From: Sonoma Co
Member No.: 1,833

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You should look into Pan Am and Westwind academy at Deer Valley airport in Phoenix. Also, if you haven't gotten a degree yet look into University's such as ASU, Kent State, SJSU, and Tennessee. If you can afford Embry Riddle in Prescott, AZ thats another good bet.
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Aug 31 2005, 04:51 AM
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Cessna 152 Member

Group: Members
Posts: 36
Joined: 25-May 05
From: Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Member No.: 1,557

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QUOTE(paskoo) Im sure there is no correct answer but here goes. from an industry stand point which is the best airline acadamy? right now i have my private rating and am currently working on my instrument. after that I am thinking about ATP, comair, or Regional Airline Acadamy. which is the best route???
Here's what I've figured out from reading this site that my friend who is a UPS 767/757 pilot told me about:
http://www.jetcareers.com/forums/ubbthreads.php
(go halfway down the page to find the forum: Flight Training: Those that support Jetcareers! )
ATP seems to me to be the best. Lots of multi time and because they do 90% of all their training in seminoles so when you are hired as a CFI you will be logging tons of multi time. As far as I know you won't get so much multi time anywhere else. Airlines hire you based on your multi time!
You must have 2 years of college or work experience, your PPL, 85 hours TT and 25 hours PIC Cross Country.
$40,000, 90 days, and an apartment that's paid for.
Apparently PanAm is $80,000 and Flight Safety is also just about that much once you factor in the cost of renting an apartment.
My friend who posts on that site as DE727 thinks that PanAm lies in their ads by saying that you are guaranteed hire somewhere and that the airline industry is doing just GREAT!
They also talk about a school called Ari-Ben there, but it sounds like their airplanes are always broken and the seats in them are painful!
Coincindentally, I am calling tomorrow to schedule my phone interview with ATP!
I am 10 hours short of PIC Cross Country time... I could do it in a 172 at ATP for $100/hr with an instructor riding along or do it up here at the flight school that I just got my PPL at in a '98 172 for $120/hr without an instructor riding along.
If you can go to ATP stop your Instrument training because I've read that you cannot get a credit for instrument training you have already done.
If you do the ATP Career Pilot Program the cost does not change no matter what... so it makes sense to start you IR there, or you are throwing money out the window if you go a lot of IR training in advance.
Maybe FastJet can confirm if that is really true.
QUOTE(Fast Jet) Go to ATP thats www.allATPs.com right? Go there then. Tell `em Fast Jet sent you.
Will that make them want to hire me as a CFI even more?
I want to go to the Sacramento location- I am in Seattle.
Is the SAC location nice, FastJet?
thanks!
(I think I'll do well in the ATP call center while I'm waiting for a CFI slot in SAC, huh?! :D )
Check out that forum I linked to above- people talk about how you should avoid PFT (pay for training), such as Comair. I agree. (I'm not an airline pilot and don't really know that much on this subject except what I've researched in the last two months).
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Aug 31 2005, 04:59 AM
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Cessna 152 Member

Group: Members
Posts: 36
Joined: 25-May 05
From: Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Member No.: 1,557

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[quote="KLM777"]
LOL that's funny I have all three of those schools pamphlets in my room. I think the one with the Best offer is ATP but here is the rundown.
ATP
Course:Airline Career Pilot Program(ACPP)&Direct Track Placement
Will take you from Private Pilot to Certified Flight Instructor with approximately 190 hours of multi-engine time.You have two choices 90 day fast Track or 10 months(free housing).Direct Track is the new airline placement option following the Airline Career Pilot Program. Direct Track provides the fastest way to go from Airline Career Pilot Program graduate to Airline Pilot without flight instructing.Your success in receiving a Regional Airline First Officer job offer is backed by ATP’s exclusive $10,000 rebate guarantee and a guaranteed multi-engine instructor position with ATP.
Aircraft:65 PA-44 seminoles,2 diamond stars(13 on order),16 C-172, Cessna 525 and 501 jets
Price: ACPP=$39,995 DTP=$32,995 Total=$77,985
Regoinal Airline Academy
Course:My first impression was how could all of their graduates have an airline job and they only have about 6 planes at each campus.But then I found out that you have your choice of three different regional aircraft ratings included in your training. To tell you the truth I think they have a good offer but I wouldn't apply unless any of my first choicesdidn't work out. But if RAA is "your school", then nevertheless apply apply apply! Just so you know----"Regional Airline Academy has alliances with regional airlines that guarantee interviews for graduates. We offer college degrees and financial aid along with Flight Attendant Training."
Aircraft:22 total aircraft including PA28s, PA28Rs, PA32s and C152s
Price:$45,000(+or-)[/quote
___________________________________________
==================================
At ATP don't do the DTP and save $33,000. It doesn't make sense to go into $80,000 of debt because a regional pilot can't make those payments anyway!
Just do the $40,000 Career Pilot Program and then be a flight instructor at ATP and logs tons of multi.
Cheaper than Comair!
Don't pay for "connections"- pay for the training you are getting!!!
It doesn't matter how many nice new airplanes a school has if they are just singles!
ATP has plenty of new and post 2000 Seminoles- I can't wait to go there.
Wow, I sound like I work there already don't I?
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Sep 7 2005, 10:56 PM
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Cessna 152 Member

Group: Members
Posts: 2
Joined: 24-July 05
From: Sonoma Co
Member No.: 1,833

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Does anyone have any input about American Flyers in Hayward, I have the GI Bill and ATP won't take it, any suggestions would be great, I also looked at Sierra Academy, and Air Desert Pacific.
Thanks for the help !!!
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Nov 3 2005, 12:40 PM
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Cessna 152 Member

Group: Members
Posts: 4
Joined: 3-November 05
Member No.: 2,435

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Hey guys,
Do you know by any chance if there are any flightschools in Canada that can give you FAA Multi Engine Training?
Herewith I give you some information about my ratings:
FAA Private Pilot License ( SEL)
FAA Instrument Rating ( SEL)
FAA Commercial Airline Pilot License ( SEL)
My total Flighttime is approx. 280 hours.
Thank you very much in advance and hope to hear from you guys soon.
Sander
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flynhidivnlo
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Nov 7 2005, 12:31 AM
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Guests

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MESA AIRLINES PILOT DEVELOPMENT. you'll be flying online within 2 yrs. starting from the very beginning with your private.
http://www.mesa-air.com/mpd/
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