CBH99 said:
I realize this thread is aircrew dominated & you guys are talking about all kinds of specifics within the RCAF that folks outside the RCAF wouldn't understand in the depth or complexity that you do. And it's good to read all the different perspectives on these issues, as there is more to be gained from an insider's perspective.
I'll ask again what I asked about a month ago, in a different thread:
If you could choose 3 things the RCAF could implement in the next year or two to help address this issue - what would they be?
(Any and all reasonable suggestions would be appreciated! More training at unit level? More folks hired? Expanding instructor/training aircraft inventory? As someone with 0 RCAF experience, really curious to hear what the working folks have to say about what could be done, reasonably, to fix this)
Looking at the production end of things: anything we do to get above 115 new wings grads per year needs money, potentially a lot of it.
From a Moose Jaw level, we’re at max capacity. If they wanted to boost it, we’d need more planes (and so more instructors and maintainers), more sims (one’s down right now, and it’s causing a backlog), and ideally the ability to fly in light ice. Any of that is a huge expense: planes are $6 million, sims are $15 million.
We could rethink helo training. Right now we spend $750,000 on a Phase II slot, give prospective pilots 80 flights hours on effectively a prop fighter, and then send em off to Portage to relearn everything. Maybe Phase II Jet Ranger would be a better option?
That, of course, would require more equipment and instructors in different places ($$), and a rethink of our current selection process (which happens at the end of Phase II). Would it be worth it? I’m totally unqualified to say.
I’m not even sure Phase II production is part of the problem. The gun squadrons (Jets) said they can’t take all the folks the training system is giving them. Several other OTUs’ wait times are through the roof. Maybe production isn’t the solution.