MasterBates
Well-Known Member
I had an AW1 crap in his helmet bag (not hard for an AW in a 60), and then realize he forgot T-P, and cut his T-shirt off to use as such.
I had an AW1 crap in his helmet bag (not hard for an AW in a 60), and then realize he forgot T-P, and cut his T-shirt off to use as such.
One of my systems instructor back at whiting told us a story about in Korea some pilot had to go and he took his gloves off and shat into them.
I'd heard that, but always thought it was a joke.Well, gather around and let me tell you a story or two. So there I was, exiting Iraq during Desert Storm on the wing of a sister squadron jet after launching as a spare (so they had the lead). We were in spread so couldn't really make out the other cockpit that well. We had recently upgraded to Link-4A so we had a great SA picture of where the tanker was and the rest of the strike group, but the lead RIO didn't switch us over to the tanker freq. After awhile and looking over and seeing an odd splash of red int he rear cockpit and the RIO's head bowled over, we joined up to visual comm range and I gave the signal asking for the freq. The RIO looked up briefly and leaned over again. This went on for about 5 minutes before we joined up even closer and elevated a bit trying to figure out why the RIO looked so distracted. We then saw he had unstrapped and removed his flight gear and was engaged in filling his helmet bag with...well you can fill in the blank. So it can be done in extremis. The jet was later emblazoned with an outhouse marking.
We've gotten the AirSafe vests, and once you put the holster on there is just no more room for much else. Some guys take the Camelback bladder in a helmet bag or backpack, or just pack bottles of water or Gatorade. It's so hot here that you can go through a lot of water just in the man-up process - I typically carry a 2 liter bottle of water, a 20 oz Gatorade, and two Rip-Its, and drink almost all of it. It can be pretty brutal once you drop the canopies and before you get airborne - but it is a dry heat!Some guys incorporate a camelback bladder into their vests these days.
I had an AW1 crap in his helmet bag (not hard for an AW in a 60), and then realize he forgot T-P, and cut his T-shirt off to use as such.
My new bird, the mighty V-22, alas, has no piss-tube. Piddle packs for all my friends! Adding that to the list of, "$70 million and they couldn't put in a decent ____!" Back in my phrog days, I had never used the relief tube until one day in the fuel pits, when I couldn't take it anymore and used it 10 minutes before I had to hotseat. Lo and behold, it's not draining. I have to stop mid-stream as I fill the funnel, try to stretch the tube to the cockpit window, and try to fling my urine out of the aircraft. Repeat about 10 times. Absolute misery.
Why not just piss out the window then? Seems like you could do in the V-22 also.![]()
Try putting that in a MAF, "Radio selector inop--suspect urine shorting out control." I think my aircraft would be strategically down on startup a LOT after doing that.
How the hell am I supposed to unstrap, stand-up, and turn 90-degrees to the right, then piss out a window reminiscent of a VW microbus (CH-46)? :icon_tong The V-22 window is even smaller, and opens funny. I'd end up urinating on the radio/ICS controls. Try putting that in a MAF, "Radio selector inop--suspect urine shorting out control." I think my aircraft would be strategically down on startup a LOT after doing that.