Mr. Wallace,
I respect your opinion, but given your vast experience, I am surprise to see how little you know about tactical helicopters
1) Recce - Griffon pilots began training in RECCE in anticipation of the ERSTA system - Route, Zone, Area recce, along with vehicle recognition training was taught quite extensively at the OTU. These skills are still being maintained at the squadron level, although not as much due to the cancellation of the system. To say that pilots do not know how to support movement is wrong, we are just never tasked by our lifted units to do so. Not to mention that there are quite a few ex Kiowa flyers still in the game.
2) Crew rest in the mud and cots - don't blame the operators here. We must follow rules put forth to us from NDHQ, 1 CAD, 1 Wing etc. We break this rules, its the same as a negligent discharge for you guys....bad news. We do our best to allocate and schedule crews so that there are available crews based on lifted unit requirements. You can't blame the paperboy for bad headlines.....
3) Your definition of Nap of the Earth - this was your most INACCURATE statement. During the daytime, we are allowed to 15 ft above obstacles in approved tactical areas, and below 40 knots, we're good down to 4 ft. We CONSTANTLY train at these altitudes, because not only does it lower visual signature, but its damn fun. With troops on board, we'll fly at these altitudes all the time, cuz the troops love it....At night on NVG's, we're approved to 50 ft, and 15 ft below 40 knots. I"m not sure what your 100 ft sight picture looks like, or were you staring at the radar altimiter during your flight?
4) Civilian pilots deal with TC, FAA all the time....correct, and so do we. However that was not my point. My point was directed at maintanence actions and standards. THere are EXTENSIVE, and I can't stress that word enough, extensive standards that must be met with respect to routine maintenance, inspections, delievery and handling of spare parts ect....This is amplified with the Griffon because unlike the majority of other CF aircraft, we require an FAA certification to fly it. You wanna talk red tape, this is the perfect example, and I know for a fact that the army is not willing to open that can of worms for themselves.
5) You have to realize that EVERY TRADE is not like the old days anymore. Pilots aren't getting the 5-600 hrs a year....we're lucky to get 350. And you made a good point - when army folks turn into pilots, they know how to employ the assets. Nowadays, when a platoon commander cannot even get the seatbelt done up, how is he supposed to employ a helicopter and its crew for a route overwatch or a FOO platform?
I respect your opinion, but given your vast experience, I am surprise to see how little you know about tactical helicopters
1) Recce - Griffon pilots began training in RECCE in anticipation of the ERSTA system - Route, Zone, Area recce, along with vehicle recognition training was taught quite extensively at the OTU. These skills are still being maintained at the squadron level, although not as much due to the cancellation of the system. To say that pilots do not know how to support movement is wrong, we are just never tasked by our lifted units to do so. Not to mention that there are quite a few ex Kiowa flyers still in the game.
2) Crew rest in the mud and cots - don't blame the operators here. We must follow rules put forth to us from NDHQ, 1 CAD, 1 Wing etc. We break this rules, its the same as a negligent discharge for you guys....bad news. We do our best to allocate and schedule crews so that there are available crews based on lifted unit requirements. You can't blame the paperboy for bad headlines.....
3) Your definition of Nap of the Earth - this was your most INACCURATE statement. During the daytime, we are allowed to 15 ft above obstacles in approved tactical areas, and below 40 knots, we're good down to 4 ft. We CONSTANTLY train at these altitudes, because not only does it lower visual signature, but its damn fun. With troops on board, we'll fly at these altitudes all the time, cuz the troops love it....At night on NVG's, we're approved to 50 ft, and 15 ft below 40 knots. I"m not sure what your 100 ft sight picture looks like, or were you staring at the radar altimiter during your flight?
4) Civilian pilots deal with TC, FAA all the time....correct, and so do we. However that was not my point. My point was directed at maintanence actions and standards. THere are EXTENSIVE, and I can't stress that word enough, extensive standards that must be met with respect to routine maintenance, inspections, delievery and handling of spare parts ect....This is amplified with the Griffon because unlike the majority of other CF aircraft, we require an FAA certification to fly it. You wanna talk red tape, this is the perfect example, and I know for a fact that the army is not willing to open that can of worms for themselves.
5) You have to realize that EVERY TRADE is not like the old days anymore. Pilots aren't getting the 5-600 hrs a year....we're lucky to get 350. And you made a good point - when army folks turn into pilots, they know how to employ the assets. Nowadays, when a platoon commander cannot even get the seatbelt done up, how is he supposed to employ a helicopter and its crew for a route overwatch or a FOO platform?