But hey, if it'll get you laid at an airshow ...I'm down, paint'em all cammie!
You need a cammie paint job to make that happen?
58% of us don't...


But hey, if it'll get you laid at an airshow ...I'm down, paint'em all cammie!
You need a cammie paint job to make that happen? 58% of us don't...![]()
Besides - you can paint that jet any color you want - they're still not going to be able to see the F-5 on their first KW det![]()
Advanced flight school 2v1 is a drill in talking and flying at the same time while trying to maintain some SA in a mostly scripted 3-D enviroment ... nothing more, nothing less. It's not trying to teach tactical 2v1 flying.I understand that T-45 2v1 is mostly a comm drill, but all it really teaches is a bunch of bad habits that then get re-learned once in the fleet.
Are you really seeing this in your fleet squadron? In all of my tactical flying in the Hornet, I've never seen anybody fall back on their T-45 2v1 training. Four FNG's have checked into my squadron over the last year and none of them have displayed any "T-45" tendancies in BFM (1v1, 2v1,2v2), just the standard low SA that new dudes have. I'd be interested in what dudes that are instructing Fighter Weps at the RAG's have to say...if they are seeing dudes fall back on their T-45 2v1 "skills" when doing 2v1 in the Hornet, or any BFM for that matter. I understand that T-45's teach a DBT by going >30 nose low to the deck...are dudes seeing that out of Hornet CONEs?I know what advanced 2v1 is. I also know that when dudes first show up to their fleet squadrons, more often than not, they fall back on what they learned first. Which is not proper 2v1 mech. They also say ghey stuff like "switch, switch, he's coming to you." It would probably be better to teach the important stuff like keeping sight of your wingman and killing, not extending to the point where you have to then figure out who's who. Maybe Marines are just better at forgetting things than the Navy dudes are.![]()
....abuse him....if a Hornet CONE at the FRS brings up how he did 2v1 in the T-45, the Hornet IP will verbally abuse him for the entire brief and well into the debrief.
I'd love for the NAMI shrinks to do a project on correlating performance in various phases of training to the amount of stash time in between. Maybe they already have. I'm pretty sure what they'd find, "perishable skill" and all, but I'm curious as to just how much of an effect there is.Considering that a new guy spends on average 4-6 months of time being stashed prior to starting the syllabus at -101, I'd think that most have forgotten nearly everything from T-45's by the time they get to BFM 10-12 months later. I know I did.
Considering that a new guy spends on average 4-6 months of time being stashed prior to starting the syllabus at -101, I'd think that most have forgotten nearly everything from T-45's by the time they get to BFM 10-12 months later. I know I did.
Definitely not 4-6 months anymore
Are you really seeing this in your fleet squadron? In all of my tactical flying in the Hornet, I've never seen anybody fall back on their T-45 2v1 training. Four FNG's have checked into my squadron over the last year and none of them have displayed any "T-45" tendancies in BFM (1v1, 2v1,2v2), just the standard low SA that new dudes have. I'd be interested in what dudes that are instructing Fighter Weps at the RAG's have to say...if they are seeing dudes fall back on their T-45 2v1 "skills" when doing 2v1 in the Hornet, or any BFM for that matter. I understand that T-45's teach a DBT by going >30 nose low to the deck...are dudes seeing that out of Hornet CONEs?
If you are hearing fleet Hornet FNG's "say ghey stuff like 'switch, switch, he's coming to you.'" then => ....abuse him.
We can agree to disagree on this. I personally think the 2v1 at the training command as well as the 2 plane "Road Recce" low level flights are good methods at teaching guys how to talk and fly at the same time. They should also bring back the gun pattern as well. Nothing tactical about any of it and I don't think they teach bad habits, especially once the CONEs get into the books at the FRS. Just my opinion. I think we can both agree that more TacForm needs to be taught though!