2 траўня 2024, Чацвер, 3:13
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+42 +
Американец, 15:53, 10.07

В среднем пицца в этой пиццерии стоит 10-15$. Так что пилот вложился в долларов 500 что для пилота брызги. Однако в любом случае поступок достоин позитива!

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+33 +
Егор, 18:21, 10.07

Я так и знал,что открыв комментарии - кто-то переведёт и посчитает чужие деньги.
Вы не поленились даже узнать стоимость пиццы в данном заведении..

Не всё в этом мире деньгами меряется!!!

Сколько стоит детский смех?
Сколько стоит улыбка мирно спящего малыша?
Сколько стоит благодарность тех пассажиров?
Поэтому - не вываливайте в грязи своих математических потуг - благородство и великодушие Командира корабля...

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0 +
американец, 20:12, 10.07

не стоит она $10-15, это только если без топпингов и маленькая. нормальная пицца под $20

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+5 +
rup, 21:55, 10.07

Самое печальное, что нашим пилотам даже в голову не пришла бы мысль купить хотя бы минералки пассажирам за свой счёт. И не только нашим пилотам.

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0 +
Роман, 1:41, 11.07

35 пицц на 160 голодных ртов это по 1/5 пиццы. Не очень то поешь.
Но в любом случае пилот молодец.

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+42 +
табачник, 15:59, 10.07

Молодец командир! И репутацию фирмы поддержал! И люди довольны! И особо не потратился! Можно только догадываться о зарплате пилотов вСША если на ,,БелАвиа,, командиры кораблей имеют до 5000$ Т.ч. ход со всех сторон удачный!

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+1 +
андрей, 16:16, 10.07

примерно такая же.

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+15 +
Женя, 16:09, 10.07

Реклама.
Конфликта нет. Капитану премия.

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+11 +
Андрей, 16:29, 10.07

Плюс премию дадут за рекламу авиакомпании)

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+8 +
radical, 16:53, 10.07

$500 -это не брызги для любого уровня доходов, а пилоты зарабатывают не так уж много особенно на начальном уровне.
а учитывая сколько стоит обучение итд...
на начальном этапе карьеры заработок в пределах $30К-60К, дворник может получать больше не заморачиваясь учёбой...
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The Professional Pilot Salary Ladder - Airlines
I'll start at the bottom of the civilian pay tiers and work my way up. As mentioned in the "Typical Career Paths" section of this site, many professional pilots start off flight instructing. Flight instructor pay tends to be very, very low and unless you are fortunate enough to work for a very busy flight school, many flight instructors have to work a second job in order to make ends meet. Wages of around $10 to $20 dollars per hour (remember what I said about hourly wages above!) are not uncommon. This wage often includes no benefits like vacation, sick leave, or health insurance. In some states, flight instructors will qualify for public assistance. Keep in mind that many flight instructors have just graduated from college and/or have recently finished all of their flight training and are now required to start paying back all that debt, which can amount to payments that are several hundred dollars per month. All I can say is that it can be as financially difficult as it sounds- long days, low pay, and a crushing debt load from all that money you needed to borrow for your college education and flight training. The flight school and university recruiters likely didn't mention that low salary part to you, did they?

You can see why I mentioned previously that nobody wants to stay as a flight instructor for long. This is also the point where the reality of this profession starts to kick in. Many pilots wander off into different careers in an attempt to make ends meet, never returning to the pilot profession again. Hopefully, at this point in your career, the economy is going strong, airlines are hiring, and you don't have to flight instruct for long.

The next rung in the salary ladder pilots might find themselves standing on after flight instructing is probably flying charter for a small commercial/corporate flight department or flying freight. Again, low wages and poor quality of life prevail. A person working for a small business participating in the above commercial activities might earn an annual salary in the high 20's per year or the low 30's if they're lucky, with perhaps some meager benefits like the ability to obtain health insurance through their employer. At this point, you're probably two to three years out of college, maybe longer if the economy is doing poorly.

If your next rung in the salary ladder is at a regional airline instead of a small commercial/corporate flight department, unfortunately, you're not doing much better. Entry level wages for a regional airline First Officer range around $20/hour, which equates to around $20,000 per year. This salary, however, often includes some benefits like health insurance, a meager 401K match, and sick leave. So the salary remains low, but there are now some benefits attached to that low hourly rate. Senior First Officers, with at least several years of experience, can expect to make around $30-$40/hour, or $30,000 to $40,000 per year.

As mentioned in the "Typical Career Paths" portion of this website, depending upon the economy and the financial condition of your employer, you may spend a short period of time as a First Officer, or a long period of time. Some regional airline First Officers at one large regional airline were approaching a decade as a First Officer with no real upgrade opportunities in sight. For your financial sake, hopefully your stay as a regional airline First Officer is a short period of time! Once you upgrade to Captain, at most regional airlines you can expect to make in the $35,000 to $50,000 range annually as a new, junior Captain, with the lower rate applying to Captains of turboprop aircraft and the higher rate applying to Captains of turbojet powered aircraft. A senior regional airline turbojet Captain with 15 to 20 years at his or her regional airline can earn a high 5 figure salary to a low six figure salary, depending upon the airline.

For pilots that desire to go on to a large, major airline or cargo carrier, pay and quality of life can improve. A professional pilot with over a decade of experience and thousands of hours of experience as a Captain would be considered reasonably qualified for an entry level position as a First Officer at a large major airline or cargo carrier. Entry level pay can vary quite a bit, and sometimes results in a pay cut if one is leaving a regional airline as a senior Captain. For most major airlines, entry level pay for a entry level First Officer is in the $30,000 to $60,000 range, whereas a senior First Officer can earn in the low six figure range annually. At some financially successful major airlines and cargo carriers, entry level First Officers can earn upwards of $70,000 per year and as a senior First Officer, they can expect to earn in the low six figure range annually as well. A few airlines still have a defined benefit pension plan, which is financially very valuable. Keep in mind that entry level first officers at this level are, on average, in their mid to late 30's and have been out of college slogging it out in the real world for well over 10 to 15 years- but sometimes much, much longer.

Now comes the financial pinnacle of the profession- what many pilots aspire to- becoming a Captain at a large major airline or cargo carrier. Junior Captains earn around $120,000 to $140,000 per year at major airlines, and at some financially successful major airlines and cargo carriers, slightly over $200,000 per year. Unfortunately, however, these men and women are at the tip of the pilot pay pyramid, and these jobs are extremely hard to come by. Many will read these six figure numbers and salivate, but unfortunately it is highly unlikely that the average reader will ever see a salary that high. There simply aren't that many jobs like this available, and there are tons of other variables that could come into play that can prevent you from ever becoming senior enough to hold a position like that at any time in your career.

Unfortunately, the six figure numbers in the previous paragraph are the salaries that are thrown around by the media, and the slick-talking flight school/university salesmen trying to get you to enroll in their flight program. Those salaries are assumed by the flying public to be the "average" or "normal" salaries for the typical airline pilot, and of course nothing could be further from the truth- although I wish it were true!

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-1 +
~**, 20:12, 10.07

$30-$40/hour, or $30,000 to $40,000 per year.
30-40 в час - это 60000 - 80000 в год. Что-то тут не так ...

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+2 +
radical, 23:44, 10.07

пилоты НЕ работают 40 часов в неделю
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при зарплате $30/час при ПОЛНОЙ неделе это 62,400/год
или $5200/месяц
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0 +
mapupa, 17:51, 12.07

не забудьте от это

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+1 +
radical, 8:29, 11.07

перевёл последний параграф для того чтобы стала понятна идея статьи тем кто не владеет английским
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К сожалению, шестизначные цифры в предыдущем абзаце, якобы заработной плате, которые разбросаны в средствах массовой информации, и слащаво-заговаривающими маркетинговыми агентами летных школ / университетов
пытаются заставить вас поступить на их программы подготовки пилотов. Эти зарплаты авиапассажир принимает за "средние" или "нормальные" зарплаты типичного пилота самолета, и, конечно, ничто не может быть дальше от истины чем это.

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0 +
mapupa, 17:52, 12.07

отнимите еще ~27% на налоги

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+40 +
pawelek, 17:35, 10.07

пілот купіў пасажырам піццу, бяздомны вярнуў знойдзеныя грошы, для онкахворага дзіцяці зрабілі шоў з бэтманам...
і у гэты час упарта распаўсюджваюцца байкі пра бездухоўны захад і святую русь

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