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To: EGPWS
Also, military training and experience doesn't qualify as experience under FAA jurisdiction and they have to start from scratch after leaving the military.

No offense, but that is completely wrong. Just completely wrong. I don't know what your friend in P-3s told you, but you have to remember that the P-3 is a prop plane, not a jet. It is a very different story for jet rated aviators.

633 posted on 08/27/2006 3:07:18 PM PDT by Pukin Dog (Sans Reproache)
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To: Pukin Dog
I don't know what your friend in P-3s told you, but you have to remember that the P-3 is a prop plane, not a jet.

Yes, but it's a turbo prop, which means that it's not much different than flying a high by-pass turbofan, and virtually no different than flying a turboprop regional airliner. Except that the P-3 is larger than most or all of those.

Thrust reversers vs. reverse pitch on the props. And the P-3 is a many motor. Yes, other than the F-16 so are most jets, but they have the engines close together, rather than well separated. A matter of degree of course, the CRJ's engines appear to be about as far apart as an F-14s.

Overall though flying a P-3 would be closer to flying an airliner than flying a fighter, the P-3 being derived from the Electra airliner. Pilots are likely to have *much* more time at low altitude, with all that implies.

I suspect the story from the P-3 driver got garbled going through a relatively uniformed intermediary.

646 posted on 08/27/2006 3:39:19 PM PDT by El Gato
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