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Who will fly and maintain them?
Who will fly and maintain them?
Slow it down to the speed of a Griffon...But what would the recoil do to the CH147?
And as for training pilots - what is the difference between training someone to sit outside a helicopter and flying it with a smartphone or training the same person, with the same smartphone, to sit inside the same helicopter?
The same place we are getting the capacity to train people to drive all this unmanned kit entering the inventory.Exactly. You need the capacity to train pilots. Where are you getting that capacity from?
The same place we are getting the capacity to train people to drive all this unmanned kit entering the inventory.Exactly. You need the capacity to train pilots. Where are you getting that capacity from?
The same place we are getting the capacity to train people to drive all this unmanned kit entering the inventory.
Not to sound too flippant, but we surged artillery training output in the mid seventies by utilizing the field regiments for that until the battle schools could catch up to a sustainment level.Exactly. You need the capacity to train pilots. Where are you getting that capacity from?
FJAG, turns out the 90s’ panacea, ASD, isn’t so panaceic after all…we’ve probably spent more, and had consistently lower output after pilot training was substantively demilitarized and contracted out…Not to sound too flippant, but we surged artillery training output in the mid seventies by utilizing the field regiments for that until the battle schools could catch up to a sustainment level.
I don't want to put pilot training on a par with turning out gunners, but simply want to say that when it's a matter of necessity AND priority then a solution is and the resources can be made available.
The ongoing pilot issue is an interesting point, however. It beggars the imagination that a profession as interesting to young people as flying jets and helicopters has problems retaining and training people especially with the money that's been thrown at that.
Essentially there must be a fundamental underlying deficiency there that needs to be discovered and have its back broken. Personally I'd start by seriously exploring the idea of getting rid of the requirement that all pilots be officers and waste four years of peak flying time in university. -- But that's a whole other thread where we've beaten that idea to death recently. My point is that many of the CFs capacity limitations are self imposed - the CF needs to seriously unblock much of its bureaucratically-based constipation in our recruiting, training and human resource management systems or it will always limp along the way it is now.
I think I detect cynicism from DAP.
Actually I am thinking less about MALE (or female) programs and more the technology behind quadcopters and loitering munitions.
No pilot flies them, in the sense of keeping them in the air. AFAIK the pilot is more of a commander than a driver.
I don't think pilots are complaining they are underpaid now with the big raise, but they still get treated like crap by some crappy "leaders", so I guess that goes with your first point. And they keep promoting crappy "leaders", so not really sure what their damage is as an institution.The problem space is well understood. Addressing it would require firing half the RCAF leadership, holding the rest to account, but would risk undermining the continual pilot caterwauling that they are underpaid... when most commercial pilots pay for their own training, and then both the pilots in the cockpit of a Q400 makes less than a mid-range RCAF pilot.
But because no one will ever hold GOFOs to account for systemic failure...
I really know very little about the inner workings in the RCAF these days except what I hear here from the folks in it. Back in the early eighties, my brother in law (actually my sister in law's husband) who ran 2 CFFTS in Moose Jaw took me for a tour around and explained the air force training system which all seemed to make eminent sense at the time (mind you we still flew CF5s and Voodoos then).FJAG, turns out the 90s’ panacea, ASD, isn’t so panaceic after all…we’ve probably spent more, and had consistently lower output after pilot training was substantively demilitarized and contracted out…
I'll respond to this here so as to not further derail the C3 Replacement thread.How about if the Bv-Series/Bronco style vehicles were acquired for the Transport Platoons and the Transport Coys of the Service Battalions? As A-echelon "B" vehicles?
I would like to keep the F-echelon of the Light Infantry very light and heli-transportable. And in Canada heli-transportable means compatible with the Griffon, not the Chinook. That is why I am leaning more heavily towards Ultra Light platforms. I am not particularly bothered about operating in cold, wet environments with open vehicles. We have experience and we have existing technologies.
Probably rip the hook from the under belly, totally fine if you only need one shotBut what would the recoil do to the CH147?