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brabus

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Posts posted by brabus

  1. 1. I think it'd be hard to get a civilian doctor to do all the eye crap that the AF will do for your FC1...why would you want to anyways?

    2. Getting a pilot slot depends about 1% on where you go and 99% on your personal performance. Pilot slots come from GPA, PFT, AFOQT, PCSM (BAT test/flight hours), and Commander's ranking. All of those you can control. If you have the money, you can go to ERAU and fly nice equipment, get all your ratings, etc...but it's gonna cost you up the ass. Or you can go somewhere else, get your license and ratings for cheaper on your own time (but maybe with drawbacks such as not as new equipment), and maybe not major in aviation science (because you're pretty screwed if military or civilian flying falls through). Sticking with your buisness degree might be a better idea because at least you have another career to turn towards if flying doesn't work out...it's just better planning for worst case scenario to not put all your eggs in one basket. Thirdly, you by no means need any ratings at all past your private. Everything else will be taken care of in UPT or through some exams/checkrides for APT and such down the road (after you retire from the military to go fly civilian...if you choose to do that). If you have the money to get your instrument and such, great, but if not, you're certainly not screwed for military flying. Just seems to me schools like ERAU are great if you plan on going into civilian flying, or just don't care about tuition costs, but other than that, why not go to a regular college with a good business school and still get your pilot slot?

  2. Hmmm, I don't remember any direct question at the FC1/MFS that I think would pertain to this, but of course maybe I was just really tired and don't remember. Guess rage and f16pilotmd would know.

  3. Sounds like the best thing you can do is keep your mouth shut about it...to anyone. But that's just my opinion...how bad do you want to fly? Seems pretty dumb to me to get yourself DQ'd because you said something about a medical condition that doesn't really have any adverse affects (according to the 1st Class Medical doc).

  4. Yeah you're right, confidence is needed, maybe even some cockiness...but saying straight up at 16 that you're gonna graduate USAFA and become a fighter pilot w/ all certainty is taking cockiness too far and lends others to believe that you just might be what bigiron described. Walk the line, but don't cross it. My 2 cents.

  5. "When Thunder Rolled" by Ed Rasimus (Retired Maj) is awesome. It details his life from getting out of UPT, going to Nellis for 105 training and then to SEA. It has incredible stories about flying fighters in Vietnam...I couldn't put it down. He also came out with a new book "Palace Cobra" detailing his experiences as an F-4 pilot over Vietnam. Obviously, he did two tours. Haven't read that one yet, but I'm going to as soon as break hits and I have some time. I'm sure it'll be just as awesome as the first.

  6. Go ROTC man. The Det here has had above 90% since I was a freshman. Sure the national average is 50%, but that's when you take into account all the guys that applied who either don't have a shot in hell, or just didn't get that GPA up enough, etc. If you work hard enough and do decently school, you'll most likely get one. And yes, everyone's saying the worst thing is you could spend 4 yrs in the AF doing something else. Well look at it this way, you'll at least have a guaranteed job for 4 yrs w/ decent pay and good benefits. Then after 4 yrs (you'll only be 26), you can easily start working towards the civilian flying world. Or, maybe w/in those 4 yrs you pick up an AD flying slot. You never know.

    Point being, the risk in ROTC (of not getting a slot) is not too high unless you just slack off and don't give much effort into it. Worst case, you get a great, guaranteed job for 4 years that will look awesome anywhere in the civilian world. Much better than all my civilian friends who have no idea what the hell they're going to do when they graduate in May.

  7. If you're on scholarship, you'll get $400 a month by the time you're a senior and somewhere around $350 per semester for books...all of this in addition to tuition being paid for. So if you get a scholarship, then the driving time might be worth it considering you're getting a free education and getting paid to do it (something you won't have if you go through college yourself and try the OTS route). Just something to think about.

  8. We have guys driving up from Colo Springs (1.5 hrs or so) every Thu for LLAB and AS class. They just turn in memos for PT and the POC cadets do their other class via teleconference. I'm sure it sucks on Thu to have to do a 3 hr round trip, but all in all the whole thing is relatively manageable.

  9. A guy at my det got a FAM ride in a 16 at Luke a few months ago. He ralphed inside his mask in flight. Then once on the ground, before getting out, he used his helmet as the receptible, thus effectively ruining the helmet and mask. The life support guys just said screw it gave him the mask/helmet. Lucky bastard. Now we all know what to do on FAM rides!

  10. Your junior year in ROTC you'll get your pilot slot (hopefully), then you have a FC1 medical. If you pass that, you're medically cleared to fly. From there, after graduation/commissioning you'll go to UPT. If you don't have your private license by then, you'll do IFT (get your license); if you do, you'll go to UPT. The time between graduation and UPT depends...sometimes it's fast, sometimes it's 8-13 months (seems to be the average nowadays). This is all assuming you did well enough in school and ROTC to get a slot and you didn't screw anything up (i.e. get a DUI, MIP, etc.)

  11. Yeah, on one hand, I wouldn't f*ck w/ your stuff...97 PCSM is obviously practically perfect. I would 100% stay w/ that, but I'm ROTC. It does seem that the guard/reserves look much harder at actual AFOQT scores (instead of like us where it doesn't matter as long as your PCSM ends up good). Guess you'll have to see what the guard/reserve pros say.

  12. Yep, every year 90% of the Freshman class do some kind of engineering. By the 2nd semester, 70% of them change. By the end of the first year, 90% of them are out of engineering. DO NOT do it unless engineering is what you want to do. I know several people who will get engineering degrees this Spring but would absolutely kill themselves if they had to do engineering as a career. If you want to fly, do something smart and choose a major in which 1) you like, and 2) you can get a good GPA in (becuase that's ALL that matters in school as far as pilot slots go).

    P.S. I was one of those kids who switched out of engineering (to Poli Sci) after the first semester. Had to work up to a 3.4 from 2.5...that was not fun (luckily got it to that in time for boards). Don't screw yourself like I and tons of other people have.

    [ 07. October 2005, 13:31: Message edited by: brabus ]

  13. You can get a slot through a guard unit, go to AMS and there ya go. However, the process is extremely competitive...your chances of getting a pilot slot are much higher if you do ROTC (depending on how old you are, still in school?, etc), or maybe even OTS. Getting a slot right now through OTS is also very difficult. If you have connections in a guard unit, then you'll have a way better chance, otherwise, good luck w/ the process. Bottom line - Possible, but very competitive right now.

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