Ugh, correction... TRAWING FIVE took its last TH-57 flight. HX-21 operates TH-57Cs, and USNTPS will fly TH-57Bs soon.
Ugh, correction... TRAWING FIVE took its last TH-57 flight. HX-21 operates TH-57Cs, and USNTPS will fly TH-57Bs soon.
Is it really a big deal to celebrate the retirement of a variant of a platform when it continues to fly in in the fleet in another major variation in essentially the same mission ?The ultimate indignity was the final flight and sundown ceremony of the SH-60B at North Island.....while two SH-60Bs were still deployed from WINGLANT. I guess there was no reason to acknowledge those dirty Reservists.
Is it really a big deal to celebrate the retirement of a variant of a platform when it continues to fly in in the fleet in another major variation in essentially the same mission ?
60F & H sundowns OTOH actually coincided with the transition of HS-11 and HSC-85 to 60S and the end of all USN operations of the legacy series (to my knowledge).Maybe you had to be there, but the vibe was far more about the CDRE having the ceremony under his watch versus whether the platform was truly being sundowned at a specific time.
With the benefit of perspective, I understand your point, but I think what put a mildly bad taste in some people's mouth was that there wasn't recognition that there were still people deployed flying the airframe that was supposedly now retired.
It’s amazing how much we let these people fuck us in CNATRA. We need to hire some real lawyers to help us write these contracts or something.Spoke to a buddy on the program who shared that a lot of the teething problems with availability were as a result of the contract maint provider not stepping up to take on the new aircraft.
Spoke to a buddy on the program who shared that a lot of the teething problems with availability were as a result of the contract maint provider not stepping up to take on the new aircraft. Thats been fixed. Heard T/R inspection and the HGU-56 helmet issues are no longer issues (or were overblown early on).
To your point - contract maintainers allotting excessive time and materials to tasks that are designed to be simple and quick.What does "not stepping up" mean in that context?
Sometimes comments that that actually mean "the contractor wasn't going to do work for free." I'm willing to bet the inspection and maintenance requirements for the 119 are substantially different than the 57's, yet the required number of Ready Basic Aircraft are probably the same. Something has to give.
It definitely depends on one's point of view.