Right - I’m talking about an actual civil FAA Airworthiness CertificateNAVAIR is responsible for the airworthiness of USN aircraft via a Flight Clearances, aka, NATOPS.
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Right - I’m talking about an actual civil FAA Airworthiness CertificateNAVAIR is responsible for the airworthiness of USN aircraft via a Flight Clearances, aka, NATOPS.
Maybe I’ll be able to buy one of the helicopters I actually trained in...30 plus years ago. Wonder what they will surplus for?
Yeah, there's no need for one since the services do their own airworthiness (in most cases).Right - I’m talking about an actual civil FAA Airworthiness Certificate
A hell of a lot of Army OH-58s doing a lot of safe flying out there. Most were used for instruction at Rucker. You saying the Navy could not.maintain their -67s as well?The 57s are in worse shape.
If they are good enough for our boys, they are good enough for me!They diced up the T-34s because they were too bent to accept the liability of selling them to John Q. Public. Something about not wanting civilians to rip the wings off the first time they flew it.
The 57s are in worse shape.
Even though my police cruiser is old [a 2007 Ford Police Interceptor P71 w/ 121,000 miles], I purchased it new from a Ford fleet dealership in 2007...it never saw police service...and therefore, never went through the trials and tribulations that a typical police cruiser endures. Also, my old cop service pistol [a S&W 5946 9mm] was issued to me new by the Cincinnati Police Department...it was only fired during initial Cincinnati Police training and annual in-service training...with a smattering of use at the Cincinnati Police range between in-service sessions.We should ask @mad dog. He drives an old police cruiser and shoots an old cop service pistol. I should be able to zip around in a spray can painted TH-57!![]()
If they are good enough for our boys, they are good enough for me!
Just kidding, even if they let them go for small change, I couldn’t afford the $300 + per hour operating cost. (Well, I could for about two or three hours a year!).
A hell of a lot of Army OH-58s doing a lot of safe flying out there. Most were used for instruction at Rucker. You saying the Navy could not.maintain their -67s as well?
The Navy 57 fleet has a lot more time on it- many of them are over 20,000 hours while the Army's 67s were a little over 10,000 when they got rid of them for their Lakotas.A hell of a lot of Army OH-58s doing a lot of safe flying out there. Most were used for instruction at Rucker. You saying the Navy could not.maintain their -67s as well?
Interesting. We had two OH-58s that came to us in Ft Rucker trainer livery. Same for another angecy in the state. Don't know their history except the last duty station.More than that.
Most OH-58s were in operational Army units. Not to say that's not tough duty, but it's not 700+ hours a year of fam students slamming those things into the ground.
I don't think you'll see many, if any, Army -67s in civilian hands.
I'd say this Bell 206B3 is flying more stressful duty on airframe and drivetrain than any SNA in HT's...
That's a cool video, but way less taxing that an SNA landing.I'd say this Bell 206B3 is flying more stressful duty on airframe and drivetrain than any SNA in HT's...
CNATRA sent a cadre of HT IP's to fly the AStar/AS350B during the Army NTH competition. It was a fun experience - biggest memory that stays with me was the openess of cabin and really nimble flight controls. Army select the TH-67 and that was that. But it was fun taking a couple of days of from production to fly something different.The rotors go the wrong way on the A-Star. Not a bad workhorse, but not really suited for training.