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Hello everyone.. I'm new to this newsgroup and im sure glad I found
it.. there seems to be a ton of good information here.. My question is to anyone who is a pilot or knows about this field and can help me go in the right direction. My father was in the military as a crewcheif on the C17 and many other cargo planes until he retired.. All my life I have wanted to be a pilot, but after I graduated highschool I lost sight of what I wanted to do and been working fulltime and havn't went into the direction I wanted to be in.. My question to everyone is I want to know if it is possible to still have a future being a Aviator for the Air Force or even Air National Guard? I am 22 years old (I dont think thats to old, but maybe its pushing it just getting started?) I only have 1 semester of college. From my understanding I need a bachelor degree.. which I could probally get done in a few years. I need some advice on what I should start doing right now to get going where I need to be. thanks in advance! Paul |
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Well, my advice would be to get some more education. If your speaking
skills match your writing skills then you should go back to the tenth grade, Wow, thanks for the advice.. I dont remember asking anyone to come here and bash me. I dont know exactly what it is I wrote that was wrong.. but i'll just leave it alone. |
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Wow, thanks for the advice.. I dont remember asking anyone to come
here and bash me. I dont know exactly what it is I wrote that was wrong.. but i'll just leave it alone. Don't worry about it. there seem to be some here whose whole purpose in being on Usenet is to point out the mistakes that others make. It can be an interesting but unfriendly place if you let the nitpickers get to you or let yourself take things personally. That was great advise about getting an FAA physical. Getting a degree is important no matter what, military, pilot, or whatever. The Army doesn't require a four year degree to fly rotary wings. you might wnat to talk to a recruiter about taking the qualifying tests. In any case joining the Reserves or Guard while going to college partialy at Uncle Sam's expense has been a path some have taken. The key is to be in the best physical condition you can and agressively pursue college. Steve |
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![]() In any case joining the Reserves or Guard while going to college partialy at Uncle Sam's expense has been a path some have taken. The key is to be in the best physical condition you can and agressively pursue college. Steve That would be my advice. I have a friend that was in your position, did not do that great in college at first, and left for a little bit. He joined the ANG, got his act together, and is now a full time ANG F-16 pilot. Ron PA-31T Cheyenne II Maharashtra Weather Modification Program Pune, India |
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Greasy Rider @ invalid.com wrote:
Well, my advice would be to get some more education. If your speaking skills match your writing skills then you should go back to the tenth grade, Yo, Greasy: you should end a sentence with a period, not with a comma! Get some more education, idiot! Your intended victim may not be like you and me, but that doesn't mean there is no future for him in aviation. He could always fly helicopters. Jack |
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Well I got a few people giving me advice and some that want to be assholes.
Thanks for the help, ill look more into it. Any more advice is appreciated. Paul Jack wrote in message igy.com... Greasy Rider @ invalid.com wrote: Well, my advice would be to get some more education. If your speaking skills match your writing skills then you should go back to the tenth grade, Yo, Greasy: you should end a sentence with a period, not with a comma! Get some more education, idiot! Your intended victim may not be like you and me, but that doesn't mean there is no future for him in aviation. He could always fly helicopters. Jack |
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![]() Your intended victim may not be like you and me, but that doesn't mean there is no future for him in aviation. He could always fly helicopters. Hey, Jack. Eat me. Gordon Jets *are* for kids, yanno ====(A+C==== USN SAR An LZ is a place you want to land, not stay. |
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Paulwall wrote in message
om... Hello everyone.. I'm new to this newsgroup and im sure glad I found it.. there seems to be a ton of good information here.. My question is to anyone who is a pilot or knows about this field and can help me go in the right direction. My father was in the military as a crewcheif on the C17 and many other cargo planes until he retired.. All my life I have wanted to be a pilot, but after I graduated highschool I lost sight of what I wanted to do and been working fulltime and havn't went into the direction I wanted to be in.. My question to everyone is I want to know if it is possible to still have a future being a Aviator for the Air Force or even Air National Guard? I am 22 years old (I dont think thats to old, but maybe its pushing it just getting started?) I only have 1 semester of college. From my understanding I need a bachelor degree.. which I could probally get done in a few years. I need some advice on what I should start doing right now to get going where I need to be. thanks in advance! Paul Your first step might be to get a First Class FAA Physical Exam to see if there is some medically disqualifying condition. Or if you are in good shape, you might just opt for a very good eye exam, not just a glance at a wall chart and guess at the letters. When I was in the Navy Club in college we heard many stories about what was called the "NAMI Whammy". That meant prospective aviators meeting the basic entry requirements only to find that the strict physical exam found something that prevented them getting a flight slot or limited what kind of slot they could get, say not as a pilot but as a Non-Flying Officer, (WSO or guy in back). Often the story was a candidate that had been told he had 20/20 by slack civilian doctors only to find that it was almost 20/20 or however NAMI measures it. If you have some sort of disqualifying medical condition, better to know that now than after you go on the hook for a bunch of college debt and have skipped over some civilian flying opportunities, if there are any these days. I've heard that the vision requirements have been eased ever so slightly since the days when you needed vision better than Chuck Yeager to be admitted into the recruiters office, but since I'm past all that I haven't paid strict attention. As for age, I think you have to be able to be admitted and complete OCS or some part of your training before your 27th birthday. I know when I was very interested in the early 1990s I was 4 or 5 years older than you are now and was very close to being able to meet that deadline. I do remember that the cutoff is being a certain age before some milestone like graduating OCS or such. They don't set the limit as "must be less than X years to apply." What may or may not be a problem is finishing college and getting through the milestone event in time. But nothing is better than real life motivation to keep you from squeezing 4 years of college into 6 years of life. -- Scott -------- "If after four years of careful planning, al Qaedists hit the Olympics in August, the terrorists know better than we do that most Europeans will do nothing - but quickly point to the U.S. and scream "Iraq!" And they know that the upscale crowds in Athens are far more likely to boo a democratic America than they are a fascist Syria or theocratic Iran. Just watch." Victor Davis Hanson |
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