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Vance for Primary??

MIDNJAC

is clara ship
pilot
Had an instructor at Whiting tell me he would rather be shot in the A@@ than go through AF training again. Also T-6 may be stronger but it sure in hell can't stop on a dime like the T-34 can. Go to Corpus or Whiting. If jets is what you want Vance probably won't help you. I can refer you to a couple Vance guys that had jets as dream #1 with NSS in the high 50s that are at the HTs. Enjoy the beach and golf when you are not flying. Go with beta and go with the T-34 and stop in 1500 feet in true Navy fasion. Plus parachutes are more fun!!! Good luck wherever you go.

Umm, you realize they have parachutes too, right? ;)
 

zippy

Freedom!
pilot
Contributor
Words...

Your area solo will be a blast. You will learn how to fly a full GPS procedure, vice RV to final, something a t-34 cannot do, but you won't know how to fly a TACAN approach, because it doesn't have one. You will be able to fly an ILS, and you'll fly a lot of them, another thing the t-34 cannot do. There isn't a squirrel running furiously on a wheel behind the dash. Very rarely will you cancel for maintenance. You will learn how to sarcastically brush off the sweeping generalizations of your fellow navy brethren when you come back to the true blue service for having gone through the "kindergarten flight school program". You will have to burn your flight suit to fix the AF goofiness in patches and pockets and velcro. Letting the zipper down all the way without a FAIP bitching at you will be a relief.


more words...

Hmmm, flying the full procedure vs taking rv to final... keep it, I'll take vectors. ILS's... great... I've flown maaaybe 5 since i've gotten winged (one was the other day. First time in 16months and 450hrs...) PARs are a lot more realistic for a Navy guy.

Not trying to bash your post... The things you mention seem like big deals when you are going through training. But, bottom line is that once you hit the RAG for your fleet aircraft, none of that shit matters.

To the original poster- you won't be able to control if you get one specific platform any better from being trained at Vance, Corpus or Whiting vs. any of the others. Go where your friends are going, enjoy the freedom on days you aren't flying, stay Navy and shit will work out the way it will work out. At least you won't be setting yourself up for a huge letdown if you spent 6 months in purgatory and didn't select your pipeline of choice. If you get sent to Vance through voluntoldism, go and do your best, and make the best of the situation but don't go there thinking that you'll have any better shots at jets- thats an untrue impression API Stucon gives studs to dupe them into filling Vance slots.
 

Gatordev

Well-Known Member
pilot
Site Admin
Contributor
It's a brand new airplane, with 3 times the torque and almost 3 times the horsepower of the T-34.

It's actually only twice as much power. I believe the Tq in the T-6 is %, so not sure about the Tq.


It can be a bitch to fly in the beginning because of how much power it has.

So is the T-34, and it doesn't have an AFCS to help out w/ torque.


It will be fun to fly when you get to do tailchase at 6.99999 g's and over the top maneuvers in formation. From hearing about formation flights down here, and watching them from the beach while sipping on a margarita or landshark, they don't compare with how we flew the texan in the 'Nid.

They used to do these in the T-34 as well, and still do some aero in formation, but a lot of it was removed due to fatigue life management of the T-34.

Your area solo will be a blast. You will learn how to fly a full GPS procedure, vice RV to final, something a t-34 cannot do...

Actually, the T-34 can fly a full GPS approach just fine. ILS, not so much.

Very rarely will you cancel for maintenance.

This is actually Wing dependent at times. Wing 4 had a lot of problems recently. In three years at Wing 5, I rarely canceled for maintenance.

I'm not arguing the overall message of your post and I'd love to see the numbers as well. I just couldn't let the outright bad gouge go unanswered.
 

FLYTPAY

Pro-Rec Fighter Pilot
pilot
None
T-34 via Navy training. Don't be an idiot. Mods, please merge/close/zap this thread/
 

BACONATOR

Well-Known Member
pilot
Contributor
What is the big quantum leap between an ILS approach and a Localizer approach? MDA turns into DH, and if you don't suck and can fly a good rate of descent and monitor and correct glideslope, no biggie. Am I missing something here?
 

FLYTPAY

Pro-Rec Fighter Pilot
pilot
None
What is the big quantum leap between an ILS approach and a Localizer approach? MDA turns into DH, and if you don't suck and can fly a good rate of descent and monitor and correct glideslope, no biggie. Am I missing something here?
Psst. Lower approach minimums.
 

MasterBates

Well-Known Member
ILS = My favorite approach if I need one.
PAR = as good, IF the controller doesn't suck. (which happens often here, Student Controllers)

I like being able to "see" where I am. Not all controllers "slightly belove glidepath" are equal, but I know within a dot or two at 2-3 miles to go is not too bad, and easily correctable.

Remember for PAR & ILS, Groundspeed *5 ~= FPM needed to stay on 3 degree glidepath.

I just chop groundspeed in half, and use that. (My brain multiplies by 10 like a CR-3)
 

scoolbubba

Brett327 gargles ballsacks
pilot
Contributor
My point was never to imply that vance guys are better because they know how to do an ILS or full Px GPS; saying that would be following in the same vein of the guys who claim I will be bottom of the class or struggling somethin' fierce because I missed out on Navy training for primary.

My point is that we learned and did different things at Vance that you won't get to do at CC or Whiting Field. Some of these were a lot of fun (form and the higher G aerobatics we could get away with). Some were not (full procedure GPS or full procedure ILS come to mind).

Things like a Tacan, PAR, or a AOA pattern were not "encouraged" by the curriculum, as everyone knows the J in JSUPT stands for 'this is how the air force does it so it must be joint', but flying with navy IPs helped straighten out a good bit of my misconceptions about the latter two, and just asking questions about a Tacan approach at least gave me a foggier warm and fuzzy about them.
 

picklesuit

Dirty Hinge
pilot
Contributor
Original post Reply

Go to Corpus. AF training not fun. Navy training fun. Both training good.
 

phrogpilot73

Well-Known Member
PAR = as good, IF the controller doesn't suck. (which happens often here, Student Controllers)
Student controllers are everywhere. After they finish their MOS school/A school they are Air Traffic Controller Trainees - and then they head to their duty station where they continue to learn. It was always funny to be shooting a PAR and hear the stud get totally messed up/turned around, and then hear a very, very calm voice (that was always louder than the stud) come up on freq and say "Leroy 05, turn right heading 230 descend and maintain 3000"

Things like a Tacan, PAR, or a AOA pattern were not "encouraged" by the curriculum...
So what you're saying is that by going to Vance you don't practice what you will do 90% of the time on instruments/landing at the boat in the Navy...
 

scoolbubba

Brett327 gargles ballsacks
pilot
Contributor
So what you're saying is that by going to Vance you don't practice what you will do 90% of the time on instruments/landing at the boat in the Navy...


yep. since SNA's are incapable of learning how to do new things once they get that NSS and selection taken care of in primary, and since i'm sure none of these things are covered in advanced, i guess I'll never learn these techniques. my lack of navy primary training has set me up to fail when I try to snag the 3 wire in my P-3 at the boat in the soup.

To be serious, PARs were practiced often in my sims, especially if you had time left over, and I made a point to get my Out and Backs down to fort rucker so I could do a good number of them vice the three we were required to get on XC.

And everytime I rolled off the perch after having a NAVY IP teach me how to actually fly an AOA pattern, I was playing the AOA indexer for that sweet on speed donut coz it made the landings oh so choice, so I'm not feelin that underprivileged.
 

phrogpilot73

Well-Known Member
whole lotta words that I mostly ignored...
You missed the point of my post. I wasn't attacking SNA's and their ability to learn, more that I was attacking something I can't change. "Joint" training as you pointed out is how the Air Force thinks it should be done. I think early and often exposure to what they're going to do in the fleet (or whatever the hell the AF calls the fleet) is a good thing. I think that we shouldn't conform to the AF's rules, anymore than I think the AF guys should conform to ours. Do you really think the AF studs at VT-3 need to know how to fly an AOA approach? Nope. I think if it was truly going to be "Joint" then somebody, somewhere needs to realize that the type of flying we do is different than the AF. I'm sure that they could make a curriculum where a AF guy wasn't judged on his ability to fly an AOA approach, and a Navy guy is - why? Because a stud at Vance may fly a shitty AOA approach, something that's important in the Navy jet world - whereas his peers in Whiting/Corpus may be rocking it - and you don't find out until he gets to advanced.

My gripe is more about the whole "it's the way we do it, so therefore it will be joint" - see if you can find out about the JCAS pub, and the requirement for Commander's Initials that was demanded by the AF - not the USMC. Then you'll understand where I'm coming from.
 
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