What is the P-3 Rag like for NFOs? Do NFOs and NA train together or do we have separate classes/flights? Is the wait in Jax still about 5-6 months for NFOs? How much of what we learn at Randolph carries over (INS, NCS, RADAR). Do NFOs still navigate Point to Point or do the pilots do that now... Do students get to use PFPS and FALCON VIEW in the plane or is that an instructor tool only still? Just basis questions... and if you can fill in some of the gaps with more info that would be appreciated.
Also if the wait is long enough... how does the Navy feel about someone getting a 2nd job during the wait/holidays to make extra money. Do you need the COs approval for that?
VP-30 was nothing like Randolph when I went through. Way more laid back and the emphsis is less on navigation skill and more on systems managment. You spend alot of time learning about the various equipment and software that impacts your life as a nav. When I was at Randolph we spent zero time on systems.
The fundamentals you learned at Randolph will still apply. At Randolph you learn the basics of navigation, namely how to stay on centerline. At 30, and then in the fleet, you expand on that knowlege and become a tactical navigator -- things like MOSA (i.e., not flying into a mountain), tactical comms, assisting the TACCO with the mission etc. -- are added to your ability to stay on centerline. The same principles they drill into your head still apply - mission preperation, situational awareness, staying ahead of the plane - only now you get to perform in a much more dynamic enviroment. Its a ton more fun than anything you have experienced thus far.
As far as point to points go - I think you are talking about them in the navaid sense. If that is the case, you don't do them. In the P-3 when you are flying under ATC the pilots handle the navigation...NFO's listen on the radio and act as a backup. No more directing the piolts on the approach, which I always thought was one of the silliest things we did at Randolph. Your job is tactical nav...overwater (or maybe land) where there are no navaids, although there may be ships. Like point to points, you still fly to points in space, but you have so many systems to help you out (GPS, INS) etc. it really won't be an issue. At 30 you will become a systems wiz and lean how to use your gear to stear the flight station anywhere you need to go.
Interaction with pilots was minimal in the RAG. They have their syllabus and you have yours. When you go fly or go in the sim, there will be no P's up front getting checks in the box just like you are.
Just curious...for the students there now, how is Randolph nowadays? I was winged in '93 and had a blast there. Had to put up with some petty AF BS, but it was mimimal...most of our instructors were Navy and the handful of AF instructors were relaxed. The Auger Inn rocked on Fridays and San Antonio was an enormous step up from Pensacola
