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As a guy who spends 90% of his time above FL310, I have some different
concerns about the Eclipse and VLJ's (very light jets) in general. Class A airspace continues to become saturated as airlines have added, and continue to add, RJ's. Also, the success and increase of jet fractional ownerships and corporate jets has changed the demographics of the upper flight levels since 9-11. To make room for all this traffic, the US has gone to RVSM, but the ATC system is STILL old fashioned in the way they handle all this traffic and pilots that fly up there must be very diligent! It's not the controller's fault, it's the government and their reluctance to upgrade an antiquated system. With the explosion of RJ's and the sad fact that the airlines flying these aircraft are unwilling to pay their pilots a decent salary for flying them, the experience level and hiring criteria has been greatly reduced. The FAA, NTSB, and aircraft insurance company's are realizing that this is causing safety concerns and has contributed low experience in the cockpit to some recent RJ incidents. High performance aircraft and low experienced pilots is a dangerous mix. My concern with VLJ's is that pilots with hefty bank accounts can afford them, but all the training in the world won't make up for the experience they need to fly them safely. That can only be obtained one way...by actually flying. You can fly a simulator all day for many days, but it is no substitute for the "real" thing. This isn't something new, we have seen this scenario from the early years in aviation. ie. the "more money than ability" saga with piloting airplanes. The only worse scenario is the "more money and EGO than ability" saga. The Beechcraft Bonanza was sort of the "VLJ" of the 60's & 70's...if you know what I mean. (even though is was / is a great airplane) The airlines have handled this experience problem by hiring experienced pilots to begin with, putting these pilots through stringent training, and then pairing them up with 1 or 2 experienced pilots in the cockpit as they began their career. Usually a new pilot at the airlines waited and flew as a copilot for 8-12 years before their seniority allowed them to move up to the Captain seat. By then, they had a fair amount of experience and were ready. Unfortunately, this won't be the case with the VLJ revolution. Hopefully my concerns will not bear fruit, but I am very skeptical about this new era we about to enter with very high performance aircraft, flown by very low performance pilots, in a very overloaded environment, and controlled by a very old fashioned ATC system. Best, BJ Neil Gould wrote: Hi all, I was very impressed by the article on the Eclipse 500 in the latest AOPA magazine. After so much skepticism, criticism, and so forth, it appears that the promised aircraft is about to be delivered. I was particularly impressed by the description of the development process, and by the comprehensive training program that is being created. It's nice to see such forward-thinking being implemented in today's GA environment. What is your reaction to this plane? Neil |
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