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#1
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I am interested in doing crop dusting instead / in addition to flight
instructing to build hours in order to get a good aviation job. What kind of experience do they prefer? I know all you legally need is a commercial liscense (which I already have), so will that be enough? Do they want more? I know banner towing is a dangerous thing, so its fairly easy to find a job doing that, is crop dusting the same in that regard? Is the pay good enought for a single person like me to live off of modestly? Can crop disting jobs found everywhere, or will I have to move somewhere remote, like Alaska? (I currently live in Ohio.) Could someone here who has done some crop dusting chime in here and give me some info? For refrence, I'm 22 years old, 215 total time, CP-ASEL-IA, soon to be CFI next week, and eventually CFII along with a multi rating, and maybe even a MEI. Thanks. |
#2
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Crop dusting is one of the most dangerous things you can do on a day to
day basis. It does not like new pilots with their lack of good stick and rudder skills. It requires much more than just flying an airplane like a daredevil and spreading very expensive chemicals about the countryside. I've been at it for 40 years and about to retire. Most ag pilots are older guys as evidenced by all the grey hair or bald heads at the various ag conventions. It is a hard field to break into with very stiff insurance requirements. The knowledge required is far beyond aviation subjects and takes a lot of study to pass the state ag exams to be licensed as an ag operator/pikot. There is a lot of ag activityy in the Ohio area. Check for the Ohio Aerial Applicators Association and find some operators near you to visit with and find out for yourself. Its a tough job and not for a new pilot. Ol Shy & Bashful 13,000+ hours ag work and another 9-10,000 hours of the other kind of flying. |
#3
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As the previous poster stated, Ag pilots are generally a breed
apart and you will not get a job doing that with only 250 hours. It takes a lot of skill for one thing, and the planes you would be flying and big powerful brutes and nobody will let you fly one to build hours let alone **** away thousands of dollars of Ag chemicals while you learn how and build time. There is a lot of that activity around these parts (the Southeast) but the guys that fly these missions are professionals with tons of experience. You can do it but you will have to dedicate a lot of time to learning the trade and the aircraft to get good at it (if you don't accidentally get killed in the process). |
#4
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kontiki wrote:
As the previous poster stated, Ag pilots are generally a breed apart and you will not get a job doing that with only 250 hours. It takes a lot of skill for one thing, and the planes you would be flying and big powerful brutes and nobody will let you fly one to build hours let alone **** away thousands of dollars of Ag chemicals while you learn how and build time. There is a lot of that activity around these parts (the Southeast) but the guys that fly these missions are professionals with tons of experience. You can do it but you will have to dedicate a lot of time to learning the trade and the aircraft to get good at it (if you don't accidentally get killed in the process). And you can buy your own plane (used are alot cheaper than new) and support equipment and put yourself into the business... Having insurance on the above, is another thing... |
#5
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![]() "Darrel Toepfer" wrote in message ... kontiki wrote: As the previous poster stated, Ag pilots are generally a breed apart and you will not get a job doing that with only 250 hours. It takes a lot of skill for one thing, and the planes you would be flying and big powerful brutes and nobody will let you fly one to build hours let alone **** away thousands of dollars of Ag chemicals while you learn how and build time. There is a lot of that activity around these parts (the Southeast) but the guys that fly these missions are professionals with tons of experience. You can do it but you will have to dedicate a lot of time to learning the trade and the aircraft to get good at it (if you don't accidentally get killed in the process). And you can buy your own plane (used are alot cheaper than new) and support equipment and put yourself into the business... I used to work at a co-op in Idaho delivering fertilizer and chemicals. One customer with a lot of land decided he could save money on spraying by buying his own Pawnee. Sent the oldest kid through flight training. All went well the first day; the second day he rolled it into a ball and they drug it behind the potato cellar where it still lie years later. Kid lived though. Delivered to another operator that only worked three months a year, the rest of the time he vacationed in Florida. Flew sunrise to sunset those three months though. Never shut the engine off during the day, even to fuel and eat. Allen |
#6
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Allen wrote:
I used to work at a co-op in Idaho delivering fertilizer and chemicals. One customer with a lot of land decided he could save money on spraying by buying his own Pawnee. Sent the oldest kid through flight training. All went well the first day; the second day he rolled it into a ball and they drug it behind the potato cellar where it still lie years later. Kid lived though. Delivered to another operator that only worked three months a year, the rest of the time he vacationed in Florida. Flew sunrise to sunset those three months though. Never shut the engine off during the day, even to fuel and eat. Seen it from both sides. Newbie started this year with 2 radial engined biplanes that they had to make airworthy. Dunno where they got the support equipment from, but that ain't nothing fancy and he stayed pretty busy. Need the equipment to do both seed and booms for spraying liquids though. All the others are flying planes that are many years old, some turbine and some with radials (southamerican low wing Drombadiers (sp?) in one fleet). Mosquitoes are done with the small Lycontsores, all very underpowered from what I'm told. There are some helo operators here in LA but are fairly rare and are usually trucked around the nation doing rights-of-way spraying... I was there when we extracted the turbine biplane from ontop of the C150 that landed together in Jennings. Both pilots met up at the left wingtip and were very lucky to have survived... Turboprop chewed through the cowling and 0-200 of the Cessna and the landing gear was right behind the flaps, in a perfect mating position... Dunno where my photos of it are at the moment... |
#7
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First, you need to start using the phrase "Aerial Applicator" and do some
google searches. I'm not an applicator, but I hire them, have a wonderful working relationship with them, and consider them to be great friends. I got my tailwheel endorsement from one and him and his family have bent over backwards helping myself and my partners with our Aztec. Many pilots start as loaders and work their way up the ladder. That means learning about chemicals and knowing how to safely handle them, not only for yourself, but for the pilot and the airplane. Most of the chemicals are actually safer than most household chemicals but you don't want to mix two things together that with agitation suddenly become too thick to spray, createing a load in the plane that they can not land with OR spray out. So the first thing you'll need is a state certified chemical handling and applicators certificate. Different states have different procedures and requirements. You'll need to know Part 137 of the FARS. You'll need a tailwheel endorsement and some serious tailwheel time and experience before a 137 operator puts you in his plane. Banner towing is an excellent example of the type of experience an ag operator will look for when hiring inexperienced pilots, an example of a pilot making an airplane do a job for a customer and a boss in a profitable manner. You may have to get training at a place like SimCom. You'll definetely need model and equipment specific training and may need a type certificate. You'll need to be able to get up well before daylight, sleep when it's windy, and work until dark. The more skills you have, the more valuable you will be to the 137 certificate holder. Many ag pilots are also A&Ps, AIs, and helicopter pilots. Some pilots move with the work. As crops grow and progress on one part of the country they move towards those crops and work for different 137 operations as the seasons and locations change. Most of all, you need to get in touch with the ag applicators in your local area. If you can't find them, ask the larger farmers in Ohio. The best farmers use the best applicators, we can't afford not to. The best applicators use the best equipment and maintain it the best, they can't afford not to. http://www.agaviation.org is the website for the National Agricultural Aviation Association http://www.airtractor.com/ is the major application airplane company http://www.agairupdate.com/ is an online ag aviation newsletter Jim "buttman" wrote in message oups.com... I am interested in doing crop dusting instead / in addition to flight instructing to build hours in order to get a good aviation job. What kind of experience do they prefer? I know all you legally need is a commercial liscense (which I already have), so will that be enough? Do they want more? I know banner towing is a dangerous thing, so its fairly easy to find a job doing that, is crop dusting the same in that regard? Is the pay good enought for a single person like me to live off of modestly? Can crop disting jobs found everywhere, or will I have to move somewhere remote, like Alaska? (I currently live in Ohio.) Could someone here who has done some crop dusting chime in here and give me some info? For refrence, I'm 22 years old, 215 total time, CP-ASEL-IA, soon to be CFI next week, and eventually CFII along with a multi rating, and maybe even a MEI. Thanks. |
#8
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For refrence, I'm 22 years old, 215 total time,
Must be a typo right? Must have 250 hrs to have a commercial license, at least in my copy of the FARs. Watson |
#9
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Part 141.
----- Anyways, I guess I won't be crop dusting (or Aerial Application) at least for a little while... |
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