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JT442

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Viewing 15 posts - 616 through 630 (of 870 total)
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  • in reply to: Mosquito to fly at Legends 2011? #1064274
    JT442
    Participant

    [QUOTE=mosquito51;1737777]Now that Easter 2011 has gone, does anyone know if the Mosquito flew at the airshow in Auckland as predicted? …….QUOTE]

    A quick check of the airshow flying programme and their news pages show that it wasn’t there.

    in reply to: General Discussion #335755
    JT442
    Participant

    We’re still fascinated by it over here too….

    in reply to: Space Shuttle Tribute #1869254
    JT442
    Participant

    We’re still fascinated by it over here too….

    in reply to: The Red White and Blue picture thread ….. #1066188
    JT442
    Participant

    XM479, Leeming, April 2011

    in reply to: Forum Virtual Art Gallery #1069558
    JT442
    Participant

    Here’s one which as auctioned at last year’s Great North Fly In at Eshott, all in aid of Help For Heroes.

    Hawker Demon of 607 Sqn….. and a sneak preview of something else…….

    in reply to: Mosquito replica – Airborne! #1070700
    JT442
    Participant

    It was an interesting first landing…..

    Judging it for what it is, it’s a great achievement – flying a home designed and built light aircraft!

    Don’t compare it to a full size Mossie – enjoy it as a tribute to the design. Remember the Aero / He111 that used to play the bad guy at late 80’s airshows?…… no one complained then…

    in reply to: Avro Vulcan XL319 Restoration Project #1072073
    JT442
    Participant

    There is work going on behind the scenes re: replacement parts.

    in reply to: How does one become an aircraft restoration technician? #1074924
    JT442
    Participant

    City and Guilds produce the NVQ framework……. 😀

    in reply to: How does one become an aircraft restoration technician? #1075094
    JT442
    Participant

    … and having just re-read the questions:

    The qualifications offered by the RAF DO translate into civvie street, they offer City and Guilds as well as BTEC Aeronautical engineering the same as any other aerospace college. The problem you have is that they are low level qualifications and only cover RAF Mechs and civie fitters.

    For high levels of experience and professional competnce, the CAA ONLY recognise their own Part 147 facilities delivering the part 66 exams. The RAF do not have a requirement for such a licence as their rank system and the experience involved in promotion acts in a similar way.

    The experience gained by a 15 year long stint in the RAF is huge, however the CAA are bound to only recognise experince gained within an EASA part 145 company, ie. one that is subject to CAA/EASA audits and quality control. The RAF is not one, and therefore expeience gained on military registered types does not count towards the EASA licence application. There are always exceptions and fitters with considerable time on VC10, Tristar, Sentry, etc MAY be awarded a small reduction in time served to gain the licence. I believe that the licence exams may be gained during a PVR / resettlement procedure, but usually only if the candidate has time served on the more commercial aircraft types….

    Aircraft such as the King Airs at Cranwell are Civillian registered aircraft and mantained by civillian groundcrew, but are LEASED to the MOD for training purposes. In the nxt couple of years, both the tanker fleet (Airbus A300) and the Sea King replacement (any offers?) will be civillian registered, owned and maintained. Where combat ops are a possibility, the civillian groundcrew are required to join the RAF reserves, with the benefits of such available to them….

    There are downsides to both routes to becoming a professional engineer:

    RAF: Minimum service time of 9 years, by which time you would be a Corporal, maximum! The pay is not brilliant by any stretch of the imagination, and you WILL be sent to sandy places where there are huge spiders and people with backpacks. You will not get a true choice of aircraft types to work on, and you will most likely move every three to five years.

    Part 66: Minimum training time of 5 years including 2-3 years of on the job training as a mechanic (paid). You must be 21 to hold a B1/B2 licence and the course is expensive and difficult. Absolute dedication is required. After all of the training, you will be viewed as pond life with no experience, and getting a job these days is difficult. Keeping one is just as hard. Training levels vary with establishments. Find the ones with a good reputation and a high failure rate.

    There are benefits:

    RAF: Job security. Excellent training.

    Part 66: Better pay than the RAF. Licenced engineers start at around £40k. (Mechanics contract at £15-£20 per hour or salary of £24k – £30k) You decide where you work and what you work on. Its a job – you choose. You’re self employed as a contractor, thus pay less tax…

    Either route will take time, an all the while you could volunteer at whatever museum is local to you.

    in reply to: No Perth Airshow 2011 #1075127
    JT442
    Participant

    The ones at Errol have been surveyed with a view to re-locate them… The owner of Errol and the owner of Perth are one and the same apparently….

    in reply to: No Perth Airshow 2011 #1075419
    JT442
    Participant

    look on the bright side… you should be getting a Gannet and Buccaneer very soon….. 😎

    in reply to: How does one become an aircraft restoration technician? #1075557
    JT442
    Participant

    My first step was to join the RAF as an Airframe tech. I cross-trained to engines to become a Heavy, but this was before the trades merged anyway. With the beefit of hindsight, perhaps I wouldn’t have joined the RAF but gone for a civvie apprenticeship. You have alot of choice these days for your basic education.

    I agree with cometguy – volunteer first to make sure this is what you want to do. The reality of one-handed-blind wirelocking at 3am in a howling gale, halfway up a 747 tailfin is a bit different to the pimms-o’clock fun-time we portray….

    in reply to: Hawker Tempest/Typhoon #1077231
    JT442
    Participant

    From the man himself:

    http://blog.kermitweeks.com/?cat=33

    “My main goal right now is to continue with the airframe work, gather everything up, and paint it for static display with one day having the option of tackling the systems and the engine.” Weeks, Kermit. 20 June 2010. http://www.blog.kermitweeks.com

    ” …..my Hawker Tempest V project, which we are bringing up to displayable condition. Everything has been rebuilt to airworthy standards but we are currently just trying to get it displayable for Fantasy of Flight. I have two Napier Sabre engines for it and one day hope to make it fly!” Weeks, Kermit. 29 June 2008. http://www.blog.kermitweeks.com

    in reply to: How does one become an aircraft restoration technician? #1077408
    JT442
    Participant

    When I was 13 I wrote to The Fighter Collection to ask the same question, and their advice was to get a job and come to them when I knew what I was on about. I’m now extremely qualified, 20 years older, know my way around aircraft from Lancaster to A321, but live 500 miles away from Duxford, so still no closer to that dream job… BUT I have worked at RAFM Cosford, Yorkshire Air Museum, NEAM, Classic Flight at Coventry, a few flag airlines and many smaller ones, and now I have a hangar full of classic aircraft with my current employer. Happy?…. oh yes. Now I’m learning to fly and still have the dream of flying classic aircraft as well as maintaining them.

    Keep the dream, but work hard to achieve it….. oh, and start collecting Whitworth tools before they all vanish….. 😀

    in reply to: How does one become an aircraft restoration technician? #1078122
    JT442
    Participant

    Become a qualified and EXPERIENCED aircraft engineer, via the RAF or apprenticeship, then EASA Part 66 or Part M licenced engineer, and then take a huge pay cut to work on old stuff…..

Viewing 15 posts - 616 through 630 (of 870 total)