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Stupid questions about Naval Aviation (Pt 2)

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MIDNJAC

is clara ship
pilot
heyjoe said:
021105-N-1810F-010.jpg

Quick OT fixed-wing question from this pic: do you do all of your preflight/prestart/poststart stuff will still chained and chocked, or do they pull the chains before you light up?
 

HeyJoe

Fly Navy! ...or USMC
None
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Quick OT fixed-wing question from this pic: do you do all of your preflight/prestart/poststart stuff will still chained and chocked, or do they pull the chains before you light up?

They don't break you down until they (the Yellowshirts) are ready to move you. The plane captains still follow aircraft with chains until it is respotted or leaves the deck.

web_080727-N-9116H-002.jpg


080727-N-9116H-002 ATLANTIC OCEAN (July 27, 2008) A plane captain stands by to secure an aircraft to the flight deck of the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71). The Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group is participating in Joint Task Force Exercise "Operation Brimstone" off the Atlantic Coast. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Wilyanna C. Harper/Released)
 

Uncle Fester

Robot Pimp
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EVERYTHING on the flight deck (and hangar, for that matter) is chocked and chained unless it's actually in motion. And even then, as hj notes, the brownshirts are following you around with the chains. A humid day and worn nonskid can turn an airplane into a zero-coefficient-of-friction science project real quick. One of Mrs Fester's Hawkeyes got into just such a demo derby with a Hoov on her first cruise.
 

Brett327

Well-Known Member
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EVERYTHING on the flight deck (and hangar, for that matter) is chocked and chained unless it's actually in motion. And even then, as hj notes, the brownshirts are following you around with the chains. A humid day and worn nonskid can turn an airplane into a zero-coefficient-of-friction science project real quick. One of Mrs Fester's Hawkeyes got into just such a demo derby with a Hoov on her first cruise.

That's awesome - I'm using that one some day. :D

Brett
 

HeyJoe

Fly Navy! ...or USMC
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EVERYTHING on the flight deck (and hangar, for that matter) is chocked and chained unless it's actually in motion. And even then, as hj notes, the brownshirts are following you around with the chains. A humid day and worn nonskid can turn an airplane into a zero-coefficient-of-friction science project real quick. One of Mrs Fester's Hawkeyes got into just such a demo derby with a Hoov on her first cruise.

Or about to translate from stationary to "in motion":

web_091024-N-3925A-001.jpg


web_091024-N-3925A-002.jpg


091024-N-3925A-001 JAVA SEA (Oct. 24, 2009) Sailors aboard the amphibious transport dock ship USS Cleveland (LPD 7) signal to the pilot of a CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter assigned to Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron (HMM) 166 that the chock and chains have been removed and the aircraft is ready for flight. Cleveland is part of the Bonhomme Richard Amphibious Ready Group and is transiting the U.S. 7th Fleet area of responsibility. (U.S. Navy photos by Mass Communication specialist 1st Class Grant P. Ammon/Released)
 

phrogpilot73

Well-Known Member
The fact that: 1. The blue shirts are holding the chains up, and 2. I see the right seat pilot's hand sticking out of the window (nice lack of gloves - show me the instruction that says once you're shipboard - gloves are optional!), and 3. it's an LPD - tells me that the caption is actually right! Non-flying pilot is counting chains. Unlike the carrier - most chains are DRAGGED across the flight deck (don't know why, and you'll hate it if you do a MEU deployement - because it's directly under your head when sleeping), unless they're being counted by a pilot about to launch.

Oh, and by the way - what a sexy motherfucker...
 

A4sForever

BTDT OLD GUY
pilot
Contributor
Ahhhh, makes me love my room in Sleepy Hollow on O2!
02-47-4L ... @ one kneeknocker away from Air Ops ... 5 kneeknockers away from the race riot, but still -- I had my own private (almost) head ... the A/C worked there if it worked anywhere ... the CAT was a dull 'thud' -- almost got used to it -- virtually no roaches ... and totally dark w/ the lights out for a significant 16-hour sleep during a TransPac ... it was GREAT! :)

During workups, I stayed aboard & was suppose to check out all the assigned squadron staterooms. I always reported this stateroom as 'average'. The Heavies & Hinges never caught on (?) and only started bitching 1/2 of the way through cruise.

Both times ... I managed to scarf that one up on 2 cruises ... :)
 

insanebikerboy

Internet killed the television star
pilot
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Contributor
And this is different from a carrier how? Trust me, those relegated to the O3 level stateroom suffer as well. ;)

Brett

You know you're tired when you're near the JBD on O-3 and can still sleep right through launches. I'm still amazed I slept through that crap.
 
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