T-6 has nothing classified, and it’s largely built to civilian (FAA) cert specs with a very common engine, as you pointed out. I know we’ve hired civilian A&Ps on the road while delivering aircraft from the factory before.Stupid Question.
I saw a pic on Facebook of a T-6 at civilian airport, deverted for an oil pressure annunciation. Since it’s a good ‘ol PT-6, can civilian A&P’s work on it or do they send mechs from their home unit.
I can see if it’s an F-18/35, but a C-12 kingair? P-8 737?
I’ll give you one better. I was part of a 5 ship boondoggle of S-3s out of Fallon to get pictures in Diamond with Mt Shasta in the background, then drop 6 Rockeyes in a line abreast off Washington in the warning area, and RTB via some VR route. Short version: only 1 jet made the entire thing. Lost 1 right after getting airborne, then lost me, my wingman had to rtb after chasing me and my emergency, the other 2 made the Rockeye drops but only 1 had enough gas for the low level.T-6 has nothing classified, and it’s largely built to civilian (FAA) cert specs with a very common engine, as you pointed out. I know we’ve hired civilian A&Ps on the road while delivering aircraft from the factory before.
Military owned T-6 probably requires high level approval, but I bet it’s not unheard of for an A&P to fix something off-station. Operational platforms like the P-8 or F/A-18 have classified components and would have to be approved by the TYCOM, so I’m guessing the answer would be a hard no, short of WWIII breaking out.
Quick sea story…
As a fleet JO, I was leading a pair of F/A-18Cs out of Oceana on a weekend XC for some good deal local BFM, spending the weekend across town at Norfolk. This was during maintenance phase on a weekend the CO had given everyone a 48-hour pass, so no watches at the squadron. Well, somebody hadn’t torqued down all the screws on one of the stabilator service panels, and about 20 of them vibed loose during our BFM double-turn. Caught it on post-flight and called the MO. After much discussion, he got me approval to drive across town to the squadron, raid the airframe shop for the screws (AM2 was out of town, but told me what drawer they were in and I had removed one as an example) and gave me approval to install new screws before flying the jet home. I also had our gunner talk me through resetting a clamshell on one of the AIM-9 wingtip launchers that had popped open on the same flight (!!!)
You should have seen the PC’s eyes on Sunday afternoon when I RTB’d and gave him a planeside debrief, telling him what I had done to fly the jet home and how those new screws probably needed attention from airframes and corrosion before flying again.
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I've never heard of having a civilian A&P do work on a stranded military aircraft. There's no easy or fast way to get a non-government entity paid, which would require a NAVSUP Contracting Officer to write a contract. That could take weeks. The standard answer is for the squadron to send a rescue Mx det. For relatively minor stuff, the aircrew can be talked through the maintenance over the phone from their own Mx folks. I've had to do that lots of times when on the road.Stupid Question.
I saw a pic on Facebook of a T-6 at civilian airport, deverted for an oil pressure annunciation. Since it’s a good ‘ol PT-6, can civilian A&P’s work on it or do they send mechs from their home unit.
I can see if it’s an F-18/35, but a C-12 kingair? P-8 737?
Stupid Question.
I saw a pic on Facebook of a T-6 at civilian airport, deverted for an oil pressure annunciation. Since it’s a good ‘ol PT-6, can civilian A&P’s work on it or do they send mechs from their home unit.
I can see if it’s an F-18/35, but a C-12 kingair? P-8 737?
Don't think that purchasing Mx was ever the intent of SF-44, and kind of an anachronism these days with GPCs and GTCC. Today, money is very tightly controlled, for good reason. I suspect that a high percentage of the "back in the day" SF-44 stories you've heard are apocryphal.Is the old Standard Form 44 no longer a thing for purchasing MX services on the road?
The record distance for a rescue det when I was opso was from NPA to Marquette, Michigan. Very proud of that one, I hope that milestone still stands 😹😹😹
As others have said, the CNATRA-contracted MX personnel get flown out, fix it, and either a contract FCF pilot flies it back, or an active duty pilot flies it back. The FCF contractors usually fly it back whenever there is a significant MESM-related issue, as a means of risk mitigation for the active duty folks.Stupid Question.
I saw a pic on Facebook of a T-6 at civilian airport, deverted for an oil pressure annunciation. Since it’s a good ‘ol PT-6, can civilian A&P’s work on it or do they send mechs from their home unit.
I can see if it’s an F-18/35, but a C-12 kingair? P-8 737?
Cadillac chit?I've never heard of having a civilian A&P do work on a stranded military aircraft. There's no easy or fast way to get a non-government entity paid, which would require a NAVSUP Contracting Officer to write a contract. That could take weeks. The standard answer is for the squadron to send a rescue Mx det. For relatively minor stuff, the aircrew can be talked through the maintenance over the phone from their own Mx folks. I've had to do that lots of times when on the road.