Not too helpful when the aircraft is heading to the bottom of the ocean and you're bobbing around on the surface.carrying a separate survival kit in the cabin of the aircraft
Not too helpful when the aircraft is heading to the bottom of the ocean and you're bobbing around on the surface.carrying a separate survival kit in the cabin of the aircraft
PRU-70A/P is the hot newness in Marine V-22 land. Huge improvement over the CMU-38 "Aircrew Endurance" vest in most ways. I say "most" because while it's a lot less bulky, it is not compatible with the integrated retention harness system for crew chiefs/aerial observers, so they have to use the old gunner's belt until we find a better solution. The material is also not as breathable, but personally that's a tradeoff I'll take.
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Plus the T-6 has a dedicated helmet bag storage - yes?Interesting. Thanks. Is that the one with the cummerbund? I don't remember our crewmen having issues with the gunners belt.
BT BT
Also fun to think about my personal evolution with gear. I originally used my helmet bag in HSC Land but then swapped to a Camelbak since I was almost always wearing my helmet to the helo for a spinning swap or on the CVN flight deck, plus I wanted the full 1.5L of water. Going back to VTs I had to procure another helmet bag since I was going out to a cold bird. Just different lifestyles.
There’s a small baggage compartment behind the av bay, but I usually just stuff mine under the seat or leave it on the right console if I’m in flying from the back.Plus the T-6 has a dedicated helmet bag storage - yes?
Horse collars are stupid, and far less survivable than the cummerbund inflation kits now available.PRU-70A/P is the hot newness in Marine V-22 land. Huge improvement over the CMU-38 "Aircrew Endurance" vest in most ways. I say "most" because while it's a lot less bulky, it is not compatible with the integrated retention harness system for crew chiefs/aerial observers, so they have to use the old gunner's belt until we find a better solution. The material is also not as breathable, but personally that's a tradeoff I'll take.
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Do the horse collars support the head/neck area? Just never saw or heard of them.Horse collars are stupid, and far less survivable than the cummerbund inflation kits now available.
Unfortunately they are in the system so they get seen as some kind of cost saving adaptability.
Not in the slightest. But I actually don’t mind the horse collar because I can tuck the shoulder straps underneath it so it doesn’t chafe my neck.Do the horse collars support the head/neck area? Just never saw or heard of them.
How do the cummerbund inflation kits work?Horse collars are stupid, and far less survivable than the cummerbund inflation kits
There’s a baggage compartment and the avionics bay. Standard training hop I’d put the helmet bag in the baggage compartment. For a CCX with bags, you generally needed to be more creative.Plus the T-6 has a dedicated helmet bag storage - yes?
Love mine
My Bose A20s have been flawless. I know a lot of people are not fans of the clamping forces that are part of the design. I do like how multiple bluetooth sources are simultaneously supported. I get runway incursion warnings as well as altitude call outs on final through foreflight on the iPad. Same for audible traffic alerts. The G1000 does not have this functionality organically. The only thing I get through the airplane is "minimums".Love mine
Please tell the E-2 program office this! It's really loud in thereBut an active noise reduction headset is mandatory these days. The reduction in fatigue is significant and I'm sure there is a significant reduction in hearing degradation.
I think you’re right. I had some tinnitus after my last CVN deployment that seemed to largely clear up in my first year or two of civilian flying using mostly ANC headsets (Bose A-20 and DC One X Pro).My Bose A20s have been flawless. I know a lot of people are not fans of the clamping forces that are part of the design. I do like how multiple bluetooth sources are simultaneously supported. I get runway incursion warnings as well as altitude call outs on final through foreflight on the iPad. Same for audible traffic alerts. The G1000 does not have this functionality organically. The only thing I get through the airplane is "minimums".
But an active noise reduction headset is mandatory these days. The reduction in fatigue is significant and I'm sure there is a significant reduction in hearing degradation.