Good question that I will ask...Do they give a reason as to why it’s not approved? It’s almost humorous at this point. USAF and USN do not approve. Twenty other nations do.
Good question that I will ask...Do they give a reason as to why it’s not approved? It’s almost humorous at this point. USAF and USN do not approve. Twenty other nations do.
I had an experience that speaks directly to Navy vs AF culture (circa mid 90s), and the instrument procedures and publications discussion here. I was an Asst Air Officer in N31 for NAVEUR when Secretary Brown's mishap occurred. I flew into London one week only to find we were a VFR air force. The Admiral's response was almost immediate, find a way around this. We couldn't be restricted to VFR in Europe. Because I was an airline guy Air Ops gave the job to me, figuring I knew more about Jepps than any of the other aviators on staff. My first call was to USAFE. Got my equivalent there and asked him what their plans were for getting back into the air asap. His response was shocking. "Well, nothing. What can we do? We have our orders. It will get worked out. Nothing for us to do. " When I mentioned that it looked like the process being pursued would take many months, he was not swayed. USAFE was willing to be reduced to a VFR air force and not advocate anything that would get them back in the clouds. The Navy simply was not similarly disposed. We were not going to sit on our butts while a process played out thousands of miles away, without being at the table and no assurances haste was a priority.
After almost 20 years working in both mil aviation and the private tech sector, the degree of Ludditeism in military aviation and DoD in general still never ceases to astound me.Good question that I will ask...
A couple of quick sea stories:Naval and Marine Officers are trained to take action whenever and wherever possible in order to ensure Commander's Intent is met. AF Officers are taught to follow regulations to a T- the reg is the Commander's Intent.
Who the F does NDB approaches anymore?
A lot of tiny airports in the PI and Micronesia are RNAV or NDB only. For us helos it’s not a big help since the MDAs are usually 800ish but you never know.Who the F does NDB approaches anymore?
A very special "fuck you" to VAQ-140 for abusing this privilege about 10 years ago aboard KNUW. ? One of our Air Force exchange officers was this close to ending his tour by bringing his RV onto base, parking it across the disputed spots, and spending a day setting up a grill and cooking up free burgers for the maintenance Sailors. He should have done it.Navy just would have (And did) just go out and buy a 4 dollar can of spray paint and solve the issue without asking for permission....
I was flying missions with the 422nd in Nellis and we would land at Nellis for debriefs and to drop off tracking pods after the week's events. PPR got messed up and one of our landings wasn't recorded in the system. We were met at the transient line by rent-a-cops, I mean security forces, in their car with flashing lights. We then had to sit down with them so they could records details and initiate an investigation. Mind you we were flying an EA-18G, so not like we landed in a Cessna. One of the more idiotic experiences I've had while on active duty. That's on top of the fact that the transient services people won't help fuel or do anything for non-local aircraft.We were immediately escorted into an office to stand at attention in front of some brass who demanded to see our written orders. They just couldn't understand that my CO just said, "Go do it." After some lengthy tap dancing with some phone calls back to Cecil Field, they finally relented to servicing and starting us with the promise to never do this again. Despite some marginal wx conditions that day for doing formation picture taking and some ANG interference, we accomplished our mission.
@ChuckMK23, I didn’t see your edit until just now. The fleet of Challenger aircraft are actually FAA birds. The flight check team consists of both former/active Air Force pilots and civilians. They work for both the USAF and FAA (and “wear” whichever hat is needed for the mission). It has got to be one of the best flying jobs out there. I must say that the entire team is top notch. I was fortunate to spend 3 weeks with them in New Zealand and Antarctica in October.Also does Navy/Marines maintain "Flight Check" aircraft to continually and test instrument approaches at Navy and Marine installations like the AF does? The AF has a dedicated fleet of Challenger 605's jets - that go all over the world and fly ILS, RNAV, TACAN , etc approaches and purposely fly below glide slope (2 dots below on ILS and RNAV LPV) and well "well below glidepath" on PAR's, and below crossing restrictions on non-prec to ensure TERPS OCS is still met. Even in combat areas. In fact, a number of these crews have come back from doing flight checks in combat areas only to find bullet holes in the belly of their civillian livery Challengers - and have received combat action awards. (aircraft have been retrofitted with belly armor)