Agreed. I'll add to that:Canadaflyer46 wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 7:21 am ...PICUS is ridiculous by definition - you’re either PIC with all the responsibility that entails, or you’re not...
I've said it before, and I'll say it again. Some Canadian rules on ATPL licensing are irrelevant and downright stupid.
You can get your ATPL flying C172s in a circuit or to the practice area and just the bare minimum of multi and IFR flying.
A CRJ F/O, with 1500 hours on type, has a lot more experienced and is a lot more qualified to have his or her ATPLs than someone having flown mostly single engine pistons. The "A" in ATPL is for "Airline", not instructing, not sight seeing, not pipeline inspection, not weekend flying so you can impress that girl from Tinder.
What I would change is remove the minimum 250 hrs PIC / 100 hrs PICUS (which is useless anyways, especially when it's flown on a single engine piston) and replace it with 100 hrs PIC (from your CPL) and 500 hrs on a multi crew, multi engine aircraft that is being flown in IFR operations. At a bare minimum a King Air that operates with two crews. I would even go further that it would need to be an actual 2 crew aircraft to get your ATPLs, like an ATR42, Dash 8 or bigger. That word "Airline" keeps popping in my head.
Why do I say that? Because I had quite a bit of PIC time before I even started my CPL training. For many years I just had a PPL and used it on weekends to take my friends flying. What kind of decisions making do you think I learned there, THAT WOULD BENEFIT AN AIRLINE OPERATION? Very little. I flew on Saturdays and Sundays in nice sunny days from Calgary to Drumheller or Calgary to Bragg Creek. That's not very relevant to airline operations. Sure, it's experience... but I really don't think it's something that will help you fly an IFR approach into Chicago O'Hare.
Also, if any instructors here feel the need to defend their experience, don't. I can't go with my 6000+ hours on turboprops and jets and just demand a Class IV instructor rating. My experience is not relevant. I'd have to get my license just like the 200 hr guy does and rightfully so. Different experience, different skills for different jobs. Any FOR THE RECORD, for all of those easily offended, I really want to get my instructor's rating. I want to justify that $12K somehow, but (call me old fashion European), I think it would be a nice retirement gig, or even part time gig, being able to teach the next generation of pilots.





