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True, but an instructor's worth is determined by how good he or she can make Joe or Jane Average.A better student is a better student.
The AF sees it as a rotary wing pipleline platform - in the same vain as HH-60, HH-1N, etc .Don't the Marines run through a hybrid helo/T-44 thing? I think that sounds much better.
Don't the Marines run through a hybrid helo/T-44 thing? I think that sounds much better.
The rumor is that they are going to change the training pipeline by having the guys complete their NATOPS instrument checks in the T-6 before going to South Field and then skipping VT-35 completely in order to reduce time to train.
Because they need to be able to fly approaches fast.Pardon my ignorance here, but is there really a necessity to put them through the instrument syllabus in the T6? Why not just treat them like a helo guy and do the instrument (read normal HTs) syllabus at South Whiting?
Pardon my ignorance here, but is there really a necessity to put them through the instrument syllabus in the T6? Why not just treat them like a helo guy and do the instrument (read normal HTs) syllabus at South Whiting?
"Powered Lift"
The AF does T-6 in Primary, UH-1's in Advanced, wings, then off to V-22 directly.
Somewhat related curiosity question involving regular CONUS flying:All the AF students at the FRS came from T-1s or T-38s with no UH-1 time.
C-12 is useful because of the whole fly higher and faster than a helicopter bit, so the training in mission planning helps a bit more coming from VT-35. On instruments, we are generally in airplane mode once 500 feet off the deck and we aren't bringing the nacelles up until 3 miles prior to the FAF. Even then, they're usually staying down at 60 degrees (~115 kts) even though we can easily fly approaches at category A-D speeds as desired. It's really about how fast you need to finish the approach. Faster approaches can be flown to a roll-on landing at a maximum of 88 knots, or we can do a hover/no-hover landing as needed.
Is there a control procedure these days for handling the transition between the classic fixed wing landing to a classic vertical landing?
Because they need to be able to fly approaches fast.
How fast is the osprey flying approaches? I feel like the actual instrument knowledge from primary carried over well to advanced and tied together well.
Is there a control procedure these days for handling the transition between the classic fixed wing landing to a classic vertical landing?