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mason
Beginner
Joined: Sep 04, 2008 Last Visited: Sep 8, 2008
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Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2008 1:48 pm
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I’m currently in Year 12 (in Sydney) and I intend to pursue a career as a Train Driver at the end of the HSC.
I don’t really care if I drive Freight or Passenger but ideally I would hopefully like to experience both at some stage in my career.
Just seeking opinion(s) whether it best to pursue one field over the other first? For example does Passenger Train Driver experience hold in stead when applying for an experienced Locomotive position and vice versa?
Any advice or related advice would be appreciated.
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witsend
Chief Commissioner
Joined: Jan 01, 2004 Last Visited: Jan 7, 2009 Location: The Beautiful Copper Coast, and sometimes, just north of Pt. Pirie
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Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2008 8:34 pm
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Honestly, I'd just apply for both and see where you end up. There is a lot competition for both jobs. If you isolate just one, you will miss the opportunities in the other. Everyone wants experience, but very few will spend the money/time needed to train.
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BFCYU
Junior Train Controller
Joined: Jun 16, 2008 Last Visited: Dec 1, 2008 Location: Sydney "Sutherland Shire"
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Kent_B
Junior Train Controller
Joined: Jan 03, 2008 Last Visited: Jan 7, 2009 Location: The Shire
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Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 1:53 am
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I did year 12 last year and joined the railways first thing in the new year, I'm doing freight at the moment.
The way I look at it, frieght offers more money but less lifestyle. Whilst it's hard working weekends when your mates get trashed, it's only short term and you don't work every weekend. Plus you get some wicked stories and weekdays off when every one else is at uni.
Cityrail has shorter shifts so it's better when you have a young family and have to/ want to be around them more. Also as stated earlier, with Cityrail jobs you are in your own bed at the end of the night.
I guess it depends what you want, and ofcourse ultimately what you can get into. For me, freight first whilst you haven't got a family or a house that needs you around and you can be away over night, then after a few years experience get into Cityrail where you can start a family and be there for them.
And my advice, do your safeworking ASAP (for me it was between exams and schoolies), and then get out there. Best choice you'll ever make.
Who is Kent B?
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KRviator
Moderator

Joined: Apr 23, 2005 Last Visited: Jan 6, 2009 Location: Cab of a 90 Class
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Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 9:15 am
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For what its' worth, I'd start off on the freighters, as the money's a lot better, and you can transfer back across to PAssenger working. If you start off driving the sparks you don't get the diesel and airbrake experience you need to apply for a "Qualified Driver's" role driving the freighets at a later date, whereas a qualified loco driver can transfer across to the sparks no worries at all.
Also a lot more opportunites across the country driving freighters with a lot of variety in the working, from Grain in a coutnry depot, to containers, coal & other bulk products. Driving suburbans will limit you to Melbourne, Sydney or perhaps Brisbane, if and when QR readvertise...
Get your safeworking at SCRT or ART or wherever and you'll get a job in the right seat of a freight train no worries at all.
Though be warned, the hours are shyte, 8 hours bottle to throttle means no beers before work, you don't know your roster apart from RDO's, generally and you'll be sure to get dirty sometimes.
Apart from that, its' a good lifestyle, and if you want to have a family later in life, you can transfer across to the sparks and you'll know your roster a year in advance.
Trainee Driver, Pacific National
Comments made are strictly the opinion of the author and do not reflect the opinions of the ADF, Pacific National, Freight Australia or the Boy Scouts of Antartica.
My fotopic gallery: http://KRviator.fotopic.net
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mason
Beginner
Joined: Sep 04, 2008 Last Visited: Sep 8, 2008
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Posted: Mon Sep 08, 2008 9:13 am
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Wow, thanks all for your really insightful comments. Either way it's gunna be great. Thanks again.
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hurstville1
Chief Commissioner
Joined: Mar 13, 2007 Last Visited: Jan 7, 2009 Location: Where you aren;t
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Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2008 6:37 pm
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So, lets say I want to drive for Pacnat and I have been for 5 years and have gone through the training and am a loco driver.
Would that mean I'd have the qualifications to go to passenger since i've done all the training etc?
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craigd
Train Controller
Joined: Mar 23, 2005 Last Visited: Dec 25, 2008 Location: Adelaide, SA, Australia
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Posted: Thu Sep 11, 2008 8:13 am
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| hurstville1 wrote: | So, lets say I want to drive for Pacnat and I have been for 5 years and have gone through the training and am a loco driver.
Would that mean I'd have the qualifications to go to passenger since i've done all the training etc? |
Not directly - yes you have some of the train operations skills, but you probably won't have much of the sundry non-operations stuff that CityRail would expect you to have, and I don't think CityRail is currently taking anyone from outside and putting them through an abriged course - everyone's expected to sign up for a training agreement now so RailCorp gets kickbacks from TAFE.
That could change though if numbers drop and there aren't enough people interested who are signing up for the full traineeship scheme.
Craig.
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