![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 18, 1:43 pm, "Gerry Caron" wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 16, 8:34 pm, "Gerry Caron" wrote: "Marco Leon" wrote in message roups.com... Being in the software development in order to support my aviation habit, I secretly dream about working for an avionics company working on EFIS or MFD systems. Unfortunately, Long Island has very few cutting-edge aviation companies despite its rich heritage in aviation. It must be nice to have money actually going IN to your wallet while doing something related to aviation. Marco It's not just nice to work in aviation, it's inconceivable that I could be happy working in any job outside aviation. It's worse than any addiction the medical community recognizes. I grew up around airports -- Dad was an A&P. I got a degree in Aero Eng and now have 30 years in the industry; 17 years USAF (Maj Ret.) and 13 years in avionics. The downside to this industry is that you have to go where the jobs are. Everyone has their priorities. For some it's family. Others just have to live in [insert town here]. I have to live where I can do the work I have to do. It's taken me back and forth across this country 4 times. Can't say I've lived any place I truly didn't like, though I did like some places better than others. Overall, I'll say I prefer to avoid big cities so I probably won't go back to LA or Long Island. If you're serious, I know where there are open positions doing just what you describe. Let me know. Gerry I could have a job tommorrow at Collins, but I don't want to live in Cedar Rapids Iowa. Likewise, I passed on two job offers from Boeing to work on the 787 because I didn't want to move my family to Seattle. I worked there for 8 years on the 777 but that was when I was a younger man and single. The salary offer from Boeing wasn't enough to make up the cost of housing differential between where I live now and the Puget Sound area. I would have to trade my 3700 square foot home for a 2 bedroom shack for the same selling price! I enjoyed working for Boeing, and other companies I have worked for. I would advise everyone to steer clear of Chelton Flight Systems. It was absolutely the worst place I have ever worked, and that includes all the minimum wage jobs I had before college!!!! I have some real horror stories from that job... Dean I understand. I work for Collins, but not in Cedar Rapids. I'm in Melbourne FL. It's not heaven, but it's preferable (to me) to Cedar Rapids. The disadvantage is that Melbourne is a smaller organization with fewer opportunities. The advantage is that Melbourne is small enough that you know almost everybody. I get most of the benefit of a large corporation with few of the drawbacks. For me, it is worth the trade-offs. In recent years, Collins has grown and about half the company is somewhere other than Cedar Rapids. I have worked for small avionics companies. One is no longer in business (it was bought by the other company.) The other still exists, but is no longer in avionics. I gained a lot of experience, but you are correct to watch out for the small avionics companies. They tend to be undercapitalized; so pay, benefits, and resources are often low. Personalities are always a big factor in a small company, and it often works to the detriment of employee satisfaction. My point was that if you truly want to work in aviation, it's quite possible to make a decent living doing so. You just have to realize that it can be cyclical and you may have to move around to stay in the industry. When I got laid off from my last job (because they shut down the operation), I could have found a job locally; but it wouldn't have been in aviation. So, I moved to Melbourne. Gerry- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I had heard that Collins had some sort of operation in Florida, but that was about the extent of it. What do you work on down there? A friend of mine who was my roomate when we both worked for Boeing on the 777 is now a director at Collins in Cedar Rapids. One of my former lead engineers at Boeing is now the chief systems engineering on the 787. I have lots of friends at Boeing and Honeywell that I worked with during my Boeing years. I really miss that line of work, but I just can't bring myself to live in Seattle, Phoenix, or Cedar Rapids. What you said about personalities at small companies being a negative effect on employee morale hits the nail right on the head for my Chelton Flight Systems experience. Two of the three guys who started the company had zero management experience, and zero skills and dealing with their employees, yet they were president and vice president, and that made it a nasty place to work. Add to that the fact that they turned on their third partner and tossed him out of the company just two weeks after he barely survived a plane crash that killed two others (he was a passenger) made the place morally repugnant. The only good that came out of that experience is that I am still friends with the partner who was tossed out. At one point they even threatened to fire me if I didn't pass an RFI test because they had a consultant of theirs telling them that my design would never pass RFI, and I had the nerve to insist that it would pass and that the consultant was incorrect. I passed the DO-160D category M RFI test with 20db of margin. I never received an apology or an admission that they had treated me poorly. I have never been so happy to change jobs as the day I left Chelton Flight Systems for another position at an electronics company. Dean |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message oups.com... I had heard that Collins had some sort of operation in Florida, but that was about the extent of it. What do you work on down there? The engineering group down here works on Comm & Nav radios and surveillance systems (transponder, TCAS, radar). If you search the Open Positions database on the RC careers web page, you can filter on location. Reviewing job descriptions will give you a pretty good idea of what goes on at that location. Gerry |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Best Flight Planning Software for a jet? | CaptainCraig | Piloting | 2 | September 8th 06 02:50 AM |
Flight Planning Software | Chris G. | Piloting | 22 | July 4th 05 06:33 PM |
Flight planning software | Cetacea | Instrument Flight Rules | 2 | May 13th 05 11:13 PM |
flight planning software | Russ Bird | Piloting | 1 | November 22nd 04 02:08 AM |
Flight Planning Software | Joe Allbritten | Piloting | 2 | December 21st 03 02:29 PM |