Wise wordsEvery active squadron should have a SAU.
We used to get reservists flying with our E2 AD squadron for short dets, great crossover. They said the Skipper only told them to not spend all their cockpit time selling the airlines.
Wise wordsEvery active squadron should have a SAU.
I feel like I disagree with most of this reserve premise. The amount of reps and sets it takes to be lethal across the VFA spectrum of missions is a full time job. In no way would I advocate for moving to a part-time capability. If anything, we need people to come and take over the collateral duties so the pilots can spend even more time on mission specifics.
So, flying warrants like the army.I feel like I disagree with most of this reserve premise. The amount of reps and sets it takes to be lethal across the VFA spectrum of missions is a full time job. In no way would I advocate for moving to a part-time capability. If anything, we need people to come and take over the collateral duties so the pilots can spend even more time on mission specifics.
That may be true, although as mentioned the ANG manages. Still, we are not talking about deploying on Friday and leading a division on a strike on Monday. We are talking leveraging the investment. Keep them flying and polish up the mission sets when needed. While it isn't a perfect analog to the modern VFA/VAQ, my Reserve SAU worked up the guys who would mob to the next VS squadron to deploy for Desert Storm. We were integrated into the squadron for key workups to include Fallon. It sure felt like we were up to speed. The CO had his reservists leading missions. In the end we didn't deploy with them but waited for a call. Never came. I also think that simulation technology would do a lot to keep the shine on skills, even if not polished. If not already a thing in Navy TACAIR, link up the sims across the country and you can train on Airwing level missions even if there isn't an appropriate range or enough players near NAS Hometown.I feel like I disagree with most of this reserve premise. The amount of reps and sets it takes to be lethal across the VFA spectrum of missions is a full time job. In no way would I advocate for moving to a part-time capability. If anything, we need people to come and take over the collateral duties so the pilots can spend even more time on mission specifics.
NAS Atlanta, NAS Willow Grove, NAS New Orleans...
In the Predator and Reaper land, it is physically possible to pop into the base after work and spend 4-5 hours flying in Indian country on real missions,
If not already a thing in Navy TACAIR, link up the sims across the country and you can train on Airwing level missions even if there isn't an appropriate range or enough players near NAS Hometown.
VR-57 ran a milk run through Vegas, PHX and TUS. Although I did use it a bit when living in PHX and drilling at NASNI, I used it frequently when on AD at NASNI and dating the future Mrs Wink in AZ. After work drove over to the Terminal and flew space A to PHX to see her. Thought it was great. But I never saw a Coke or Snicker Bar.Not only that, but when I was living at home in Pensacola, there was a reserve C-9 squadron out of JAX I believe that would have scheduled flights from NAS Pensacola to NAS New Orleans on Friday afternoon and Sunday afternoon to take reservist like me to and from drill, we got a small box with a Coke and a snickers bar on it usually, it helped defray the cost of being an E-3 and driving to NOLA each month. One of the chiefs told me one flight they also had hops to Warner/Robbins and other common drill locations, this is circa 1983.
Every active squadron should have a SAU. The amount of trained bodies who want to finish out a career in the reserves but can't find a seat in a flying unit is astounding.
In the Predator and Reaper land, it is physically possible to pop into the base after work and spend 4-5 hours flying in Indian country on real missions, Hellfire some bad guys, then stop and pick up milk on the way home. The right kind of orders is the only roadblock to fighting while on drill.
A total swing the other way.
I'm not sure the ANG guys are as proficient as you may think them to be. For the fighter side, the most successful units are the A-10 and F-16 units who's primary mission is A/S. I have never worked a DCA lane against a peer threat with any ANG dudes.The ANG begs to differ with your assessment.
Everyone at his unit is a weapons school grad.
We don't have the airframes to do that, plus there's a huge overhead in training systems and specialized facilities that would be impractical and costly to replicate. There are efficiencies to consolidating T/M/S in relatively few geographic locations.Why not plus up the reserves...substantially?