by AADX »
I have a couple pieces of information and advice for you
on the subject of getting into aviation. it actually is quite difficult even for seemingly benign and insignificant roles. go to each of the major and minor airline websites and into their careers section and just submit resumes. rarely are they listed on indeed or glassdoor etc. Are you talking about essentially an "air traffic controller"? if so, the FAA or EASA websites will have information about the criteria to do those.
if you want to be a pilot for any, you will have to go through an aviation college and many of the airlines have some fraction of tuition reimbursement, what you are looking for at airline sites is their 'cadet' programs. so be prepared to fork out huge money for such an aviation school for the sake of getting into an airline (pilot) job.
on the subject of logging your simulated flights, I will say this. if you were to hand over a simulator flight log of high end airliners, they are just going to toss that aside and laugh in your face. may even crumple it up or laugh as pushing it away or back to you. that sort of Airbus and Boeing, and 747, 767, 777, 7XX, or Airbus Any, same.. is what destroys your credibility for using the simulator for legitimate training and loging. That is not legit flight times, it's parking on autopilot for 95%, with auto landing ILS landings. LOL.
If you want to use simulator time for logging 'credible' flights, and I don't mean legal logging, I mean "I did this and I worked it and maintained/exercised/obtained flight experience while doing so". is to burn time in King Air or otherwise any highly complex(difficult) aircraft that legitimately is single pilot operation legal. hard, but legal.
Anyway. it's not impressive to have a list of simulated flights in airliners. that's called being an "armchair captain". any instructor or any employer will just laugh and entirely disregard it. bring it down to king air's, low end citations (not glass), and maybe a 208 caravan. work hard. actually do full procedures. keep simulated flights in a separate log, do not mix them. then you can show actual flight time. and simulated (ground school homework) flights.
Get a job at an FBO. look at airport information on airnav.com and see if you can get any job at the FBO from customer service at the desk or Ramp. still hard to get into those jobs too but it's a step and direction.
That's my advice.
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While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.
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