DGD wrote:
Alot of the pilots on both airlines seem really, really young to me. In fact, most of them. I fly both of them alot. Who knows, but in the cockpit, I'd like to see a few gray haired guys on occasion.
All local (aka "regional") airlines will have only young pilots. The reason is that pilots who eventually fly for the major all start in regionals flying props and small commuter/regional jets to build their hours. After several years and they build enough hours, they can apply to one of the big boys. An new law coming into effect next year will require airlines to only consider pilots with a minimum of 1500 hours as pilot in command, not as first-officer. It's a couple of years before they make captain. That's a lot of hours. You really don't want to see any gray hairs on Sansa or Nature Air, because it means that he's not good enough to get to an airline. Rarely do you see any 50 year old pilots in the regionals. And you rarely see any pilots under 40 in the majors, and if so, they're not captains.
DGD wrote:
Still, you would think a twin is safer than a single, right?
They are both safe planes. Both the Cessna Grand Caravan and the Twin Otter are highly used and highly reliable planes. Like somebody else said, the Twin Otter is more difficult to fly and require a lot more training. To give you an example, I could fly the Cessna. But I would not attempt to pilot the twin. Losing an engine on the Cessna isn't a catastrophe because you can glide to a landing somewhere. You don't need a lot of room either. Every pilot is trained to do a short-field landing on a single.