A ce prix la, je comprend que les gars ne veulent pas payer d'impots, en se faisant tout discret dans le pays de residence.
tout ca c'est de l'enculage a sec, mais c'est une affaire qui marche, alors....
Modérateur : Big Brother
Dis donc toi, à lire tes posts, je crois que tu es mal placé pour me traiter de frustré, non ?ça sent le frustré là ?
Bon, je crois que tout est dit la ...prostituer chez MOL.
Tout a fait d'accord, c'est un grand avantage de Ryanair. Mais le travail a fournir reste maximal, et le salaire reste minimal. Ca c'est la degringolade de la profession.L'expansion de la compagnie est géante et les bases se créent très vite. Donc de grandes possibilités d'etre basé près de chez soi, ou au soleil...
Aucune ! Jet2, easyJet, Aer Arann, First Choice, Monarch, Tomas Cook, Thomson, BMI, non franchement je ne vois pas, encore heureux !combien de compagnies demandent a leurs pilotes de payer leur line training ou ne donnent rien du tout pendant ce temps la ? Je parle evidemment pour le cas de pilotes " low hours ".
Voila 2 posts de pilotes de Ryanair, un cadet comme toi, l'autre est Training captain:A tous, faites attention à ce que vous lisez sur les forums, si il peut y avoir de l'information, il peut aussi y avoir de la desinformation.
Je suis en plein dedans et voilà l'histoire pour le moment:
QT pour ta pomme, bouffe et tout le bazard....
Une fois le base check passé, on commence à toucher la somme exceptionnelle de 1200€ par mois, c'est un contrat de 6 mois mais en fait à la fin du Line training (environ 2 mois) ils offrent le "contrat" Brookfield: à savoir, pas de contrat! Payé à l'heure de vol, pas de basique. Les chiffres ont été discutés dans plusieurs posts sur le forum mais en gros c'est du 55€/ heure jusqu'à 500 heures sur type, ensuite cela passe à 75€ jusquà 1500hdv et ensuite 85€, ils font là dessus une "petite" ponction de 5€ par heure volée afin de payer pour les sim checks...
salaire captain il faut bien lire le site c est Up to 130000 euros.... il faut plutot tabler sur un 58000 a 65000 par an....pour les contrat Ryanair pour les brookfield effectivement c est different mais tout est a la charge de l employé
First of all - you pay for your own TR. Fair enough, but be aware that there are options where a TR is provided - FlyBE Q400 comes to mind. It depends heavily on your financial situation, but that being said, RYR are not the worst money-grabbers in the industry but weigh in around the top-40% mark.
Secondly - once you're done, you will not be given much choice as to wether you want a Brookfield contract or a RYR-contract, and the same applies to the base you're given. But witrh a bit of assertiveness, you can actually affect both. The "It's Brookfield in Alicante or nothing"-line is gonna come up, but it's not the truth. Explaining your circumstances will generally open up for a bit of discussion.
As a cadet, you will be moved round quite a bit until you reach the 500-hr. mark, and you'll pay for your own accommodation. When you pass 500 hrs you should settle into a base easily with no more time away from "home".
Your pay will not be the most amazing untill you have 1500 hrs on type, but then again I didn't earn a lot of money when I flew Caravan IIs and B200s, so I guess it's a fair wage for your work. Be aware that your contract will not be worth the papaer it's written upon - if you're flying for RYR and are not a union-member, it borders on criminal neglect - or stupidity so gross that you shouln't be anywhere near an aircraft anyway. You could easily find yourself in a position where you will need the full financial, legal and moral backing of BALPA, so if you're not into unions, RYR is a very, very dangerous choice (unless your family is made up of barristers only, preferably running their own firm )
That being said - we don't do "diversions" in the classic sense. If we divert due WX, we fly to the alternate, drop the pax and fly home empty - the other fight is then cnx due wx (= no pax compensation or costrly delay) and the pax rebooked.
If you get stuck downroute for tech, you'll normally be able to position back via another base, typically DUB or STN, so even in the remote chance that it happens you'll be recovered to base.
If they need you in a hotel for duty-hours or the like, they'll give you a decent hotel, no q's asked. They def. don't want you to spend valuable duty-time looking for and booking your own accom.
Time to command is good, but beware - you'll have been "brought up" i RYR-land, and unless you've been fortunate enough to witness one or two things, you come poorly equiped for the job, and have seen newly capt'ns do some incredibly daft things that quickly got them demoted again - partly because there was no experienced FO in the RHS to stop them
In short - if you're well above average smart and know your ops manual back to front and your aircraft in and out - it's the easiest job in the world. The flying has been dumbed down to a level where even the 250-hr-guys can (sort of) do it - no disrespect, but with 300 hrs and a TR it's a steep learning curve ahead.
Good luck - hope you make a choice you'll be happy with for some time to come