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#1
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Hello. I'm a Commercial Pilot with single engine, multi engine, and
instrument ratings. I have a little less than 600 hours total time, and only about 20 multi. I have been approached about a possible position on the West Coast that would be a combination IT staffer and co-pilot for a King Air 200 the company is going to buy. I know the owner of the company, and it is pretty solid that I could have the job if I want it. My question is about insurance. Now the owner would send me to training for a type rating in the King Air, but will an insurance company have a major problem, if the captain is an ATP with a ton of King Air time? Will they charge a fortune because of my limited experience? Do they care about the hours the right-seater has? While they are only looking at the King Air for now, would the insurance company care about the co-pilot time if it were a Citation? Anybody who could shed some light on this, or who has experience in this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Cap |
#2
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#4
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If the owner called with you, I'm sure he could give them the exact tail
number - it's just a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Well, I tried calling a couple aviation insurance agencies myself. One said they couldn't give me a number until I had a specific aircraft they could run, and when asked about a ballpark figures, they said 'it all depends', which wasn't really helpful. The other place I called doesn't do commercial insurance anymore. So I was just joping somebody here had some experience in this area without me having to call a dozen different agencies. ![]() Cheers, Cap Judah wrote in message . .. Why don't you and the owner call the insurance agency and let them give you a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Hello. I'm a Commercial Pilot with single engine, multi engine, and instrument ratings. I have a little less than 600 hours total time, and only about 20 multi. I have been approached about a possible position on the West Coast that would be a combination IT staffer and co-pilot for a King Air 200 the company is going to buy. I know the owner of the company, and it is pretty solid that I could have the job if I want it. My question is about insurance. Now the owner would send me to training for a type rating in the King Air, but will an insurance company have a major problem, if the captain is an ATP with a ton of King Air time? Will they charge a fortune because of my limited experience? Do they care about the hours the right-seater has? While they are only looking at the King Air for now, would the insurance company care about the co-pilot time if it were a Citation? Anybody who could shed some light on this, or who has experience in this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Cap |
#5
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The problem is they don't *have* one yet. They don't know the tail
number. They know they are going to buy one, just not which one. Which is why I'm trying to find out some 'ballpark' information in this forum. Cap Judah wrote in message . .. If the owner called with you, I'm sure he could give them the exact tail number - it's just a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Well, I tried calling a couple aviation insurance agencies myself. One said they couldn't give me a number until I had a specific aircraft they could run, and when asked about a ballpark figures, they said 'it all depends', which wasn't really helpful. The other place I called doesn't do commercial insurance anymore. So I was just joping somebody here had some experience in this area without me having to call a dozen different agencies. ![]() Cheers, Cap Judah wrote in message . .. Why don't you and the owner call the insurance agency and let them give you a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Hello. I'm a Commercial Pilot with single engine, multi engine, and instrument ratings. I have a little less than 600 hours total time, and only about 20 multi. I have been approached about a possible position on the West Coast that would be a combination IT staffer and co-pilot for a King Air 200 the company is going to buy. I know the owner of the company, and it is pretty solid that I could have the job if I want it. My question is about insurance. Now the owner would send me to training for a type rating in the King Air, but will an insurance company have a major problem, if the captain is an ATP with a ton of King Air time? Will they charge a fortune because of my limited experience? Do they care about the hours the right-seater has? While they are only looking at the King Air for now, would the insurance company care about the co-pilot time if it were a Citation? Anybody who could shed some light on this, or who has experience in this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Cap |
#6
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Ahhh.. Sorry - my confusion. I misread the original post and thought they
already owned the King Air... Assuming the owner is buying the plane through a broker, maybe the owner can ask the salesman to help with getting a quote from an agency... Just trying to help here. I have absolutely no experience in this regard. So I will wish you good luck and shut up now. ![]() (Captain Wubba) wrote in m: The problem is they don't *have* one yet. They don't know the tail number. They know they are going to buy one, just not which one. Which is why I'm trying to find out some 'ballpark' information in this forum. Cap |
#7
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![]() "Captain Wubba" wrote in message m... The problem is they don't *have* one yet. They don't know the tail number. They know they are going to buy one, just not which one. Which is why I'm trying to find out some 'ballpark' information in this forum. Cap My boss owns a Citation CJ that is certified for single pilot operations (Part 91) and he flys it himself. He has about 6000 hours including about 600 in type. He is the PIC, first last and always. If I fly along, and am rated but not for SP operations, why would his insurance go UP if he now has a extra set of hands and eyes in the cockpit with him? Judah wrote in message . .. If the owner called with you, I'm sure he could give them the exact tail number - it's just a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Well, I tried calling a couple aviation insurance agencies myself. One said they couldn't give me a number until I had a specific aircraft they could run, and when asked about a ballpark figures, they said 'it all depends', which wasn't really helpful. The other place I called doesn't do commercial insurance anymore. So I was just joping somebody here had some experience in this area without me having to call a dozen different agencies. ![]() Cheers, Cap Judah wrote in message . .. Why don't you and the owner call the insurance agency and let them give you a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Hello. I'm a Commercial Pilot with single engine, multi engine, and instrument ratings. I have a little less than 600 hours total time, and only about 20 multi. I have been approached about a possible position on the West Coast that would be a combination IT staffer and co-pilot for a King Air 200 the company is going to buy. I know the owner of the company, and it is pretty solid that I could have the job if I want it. My question is about insurance. Now the owner would send me to training for a type rating in the King Air, but will an insurance company have a major problem, if the captain is an ATP with a ton of King Air time? Will they charge a fortune because of my limited experience? Do they care about the hours the right-seater has? While they are only looking at the King Air for now, would the insurance company care about the co-pilot time if it were a Citation? Anybody who could shed some light on this, or who has experience in this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Cap |
#8
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I'm not sure what you mean by "commercial insurance". From your
description this is not a commercial operation and you are not even a required crewmember. I don't see why the insurance company even needs to know that you exist at all. Mike MU-2 "Captain Wubba" wrote in message om... Well, I tried calling a couple aviation insurance agencies myself. One said they couldn't give me a number until I had a specific aircraft they could run, and when asked about a ballpark figures, they said 'it all depends', which wasn't really helpful. The other place I called doesn't do commercial insurance anymore. So I was just joping somebody here had some experience in this area without me having to call a dozen different agencies. ![]() Cheers, Cap Judah wrote in message . .. Why don't you and the owner call the insurance agency and let them give you a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Hello. I'm a Commercial Pilot with single engine, multi engine, and instrument ratings. I have a little less than 600 hours total time, and only about 20 multi. I have been approached about a possible position on the West Coast that would be a combination IT staffer and co-pilot for a King Air 200 the company is going to buy. I know the owner of the company, and it is pretty solid that I could have the job if I want it. My question is about insurance. Now the owner would send me to training for a type rating in the King Air, but will an insurance company have a major problem, if the captain is an ATP with a ton of King Air time? Will they charge a fortune because of my limited experience? Do they care about the hours the right-seater has? While they are only looking at the King Air for now, would the insurance company care about the co-pilot time if it were a Citation? Anybody who could shed some light on this, or who has experience in this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Cap |
#9
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![]() "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message link.net... I'm not sure what you mean by "commercial insurance". From your description this is not a commercial operation and you are not even a required crewmember. I don't see why the insurance company even needs to know that you exist at all. Mike MU-2 Quite so. My situation is similar and our companies insurance did't flinch when they started having a co-pilot along (a JetProp and a Citation CJ). "Captain Wubba" wrote in message om... Well, I tried calling a couple aviation insurance agencies myself. One said they couldn't give me a number until I had a specific aircraft they could run, and when asked about a ballpark figures, they said 'it all depends', which wasn't really helpful. The other place I called doesn't do commercial insurance anymore. So I was just joping somebody here had some experience in this area without me having to call a dozen different agencies. ![]() Cheers, Cap Judah wrote in message . .. Why don't you and the owner call the insurance agency and let them give you a quote... (Captain Wubba) wrote in om: Hello. I'm a Commercial Pilot with single engine, multi engine, and instrument ratings. I have a little less than 600 hours total time, and only about 20 multi. I have been approached about a possible position on the West Coast that would be a combination IT staffer and co-pilot for a King Air 200 the company is going to buy. I know the owner of the company, and it is pretty solid that I could have the job if I want it. My question is about insurance. Now the owner would send me to training for a type rating in the King Air, but will an insurance company have a major problem, if the captain is an ATP with a ton of King Air time? Will they charge a fortune because of my limited experience? Do they care about the hours the right-seater has? While they are only looking at the King Air for now, would the insurance company care about the co-pilot time if it were a Citation? Anybody who could shed some light on this, or who has experience in this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Cap |
#10
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Why would they care? A King Air 200 is a single pilot airplane.
Mike MU-2 "Captain Wubba" wrote in message om... Hello. I'm a Commercial Pilot with single engine, multi engine, and instrument ratings. I have a little less than 600 hours total time, and only about 20 multi. I have been approached about a possible position on the West Coast that would be a combination IT staffer and co-pilot for a King Air 200 the company is going to buy. I know the owner of the company, and it is pretty solid that I could have the job if I want it. My question is about insurance. Now the owner would send me to training for a type rating in the King Air, but will an insurance company have a major problem, if the captain is an ATP with a ton of King Air time? Will they charge a fortune because of my limited experience? Do they care about the hours the right-seater has? While they are only looking at the King Air for now, would the insurance company care about the co-pilot time if it were a Citation? Anybody who could shed some light on this, or who has experience in this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Cap |
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