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Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
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Crane operator, hmm. Ladder climbing skills on point. |
Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
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If I had to pick one job in this vein, it'd definitely be rescue helicopter pilot, like in military medevacs or civilian paramedics. Certainly helicopters over anything fixed-wing / flight stable--the non-flight stable thing means you're moving more to control it, and medevacs would have you flying all kinds of crazy routes under incredible stress and fulfillment. |
Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
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So while in practice most of the air time is automated, you still have to get in and out of the air, and if anything breaks, you need somebody to manually fly the plane. |
Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
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1. The pay is TERRIBLE at first. My first year I made approximately $20,000, which is just about the same as what you would make full time at a fast food restaurant. That's really bad considering it takes about $120,000 investment to get to your first flying job. You can expect that to go up to the mid $30k range after a few years, but you might get stuck there for a while before upgrading to captain and then eventually moving on to a major. The pay is great once you get to a major, but that may take many years. 2. The autopilot is not required equipment on many if not most planes. That means if it goes out of service, you're flying the plane around manually that day (as I have had to do on a handful of occasions). Therefore, you have to keep your manual flying skills sharp. Some people on CD familiar with aviation might say "but no airline would fly a plane below RVSM all day - that's too expensive". It's not more expensive than cancelling flights. I once flew a leg from Detroit to Houston at 20,000 ft due to inoperative equipment, and one flight down the east coast at 4000 ft thanks to inoperative equipment (that was fun). Also, as Larry mentioned, takeoffs and landings are all done by hand unless you're testing the cat-III equipment or flying a 777. 3. I found airline flying to be remarkably unstressful. Taxiing on the other hand can be fairly stressful - I used to remember how relaxing it felt to finally get in the air. When the weather is down to the bare minimums it heightens things a bit on approach, but I wouldn't call it stressful. When something goes wrong - that would be stressful. Also, training is very stressful. I thought the flying part of the job was great fun. The rest of the job got to be a real drag unless you don't mind being away from home all of the time or not being able to plan for anything. |
Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
I would picture a fighter pilot being the closest job to that of an FRC driver, but it also would come along with the military lifestyle and a bunch of other stuff. On the plus side, however, many (if not most/all) fighter pilots actually have STEM degrees because a majority of them are recruited from the Air Force Academy, which places heavy emphasis on STEM degree programs.
If that interests you the Air Force Academy is probably one of the best ways to go to get started, since you end up with a debt-free 4 year degree and the required commission as an officer straight out of college. You would then need to pass the physical to be pilot qualified (vision must be correctable to 20/20, but don't get LASIK or something like that from a non-Air Force ophthalmologist or else you're automatically disqualified) and excel in the Initial Flight Screening (Air Force Academy graduates likely have an advantage here since they have aviation experience). Then the spots in SUPT are assigned based on your academic, military, and athletic performance during commissioning. To give an idea of your odds of getting into SUPT for flight school, in 2013 there were 1,035 graduating second lieutenants, of which 432 went to SUPT (source: https://fightersweep.com/262/how-to-...r-force-pilot/). It seems like you'd have decent odds of at least getting into flight school, but whether or not you would be a fighter pilot is not guaranteed. In phase 3 of SUPT you select between 4 tracks, fighter/bomber, airlift/tanker, multi-engine turbo prop, and helicopters. I would imagine that anything except for airlift/tanker might have the same FRC excitement feel that you're looking for, but the selection process is again based upon your academic, flight, and military performance in addition to the needs of the air force (so if the air force needs a bunch of tanker pilots you might end up there regardless). The other thing to consider is that entering into flight school locks you into a 10 year active duty service commitment. This could be a pro or a con (10 years of a guaranteed job, or 10 years stuck in a job you may not love), but it's something that would have to be factored into your decision. |
Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
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However, I would be very, very surprised if something like the rest of your post wasn't true for the other branches (just replace the school with either the Naval Academy or West Point). |
Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
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Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
Eventually major sporting events(NASCAR, NFL, etc.) will be filmed by drones, our schools football games and practices are recorded by a drone and I've talked to the student who flies it and we've compared it to driving a robot. The high school side is not as stressful but the joysticks, skills needed to do it, and ability to do specific tasks with practice are there plus, I would think that once major things start being recorded by drones there's going to be a lot of pressure on the operator to get the right shot. There is also drone racing which is also just getting started but will definitely grow in the upcoming years.
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Re: Driving an FRC robot. Any job like it?
I like to think that I've gotten pretty close to getting paid to play robots. For the last two years or so, I've been Lead Engineer on a project for a Container Moving Vehicle that actually fits on the back of a (very specific) Truck. It's been fun, a lot of my FRC experience has crossed over and been invaluable. Driving it is like an FRC robot, although FRC robots are a lot more fun.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/zspd6tqjhy...zilla.jpg?dl=0 |
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