Underway on a smallboy on a helicopter detachment with 3 H2Ps (copilots), we got into a good 3-day groove with regular morning and evening SSC patrols on the flight schedule:How often do aviators stand watch? I'm sure the answer is some variation of "it depends," so how often did you stand watch as a pilot/NFO?
How often do aviators stand watch? I'm sure the answer is some variation of "it depends," so how often did you stand watch as a pilot/NFO?
Dumb question, what exactly does the SDO do?
Pray that the flight sked goes well and that nothing happens that would require him to be yelled at by the SWO/OPS/XO/CO/Wing/Base or release a message. It's a thankless job that you can only break even at.Dumb question, what exactly does the SDO do?
Underway on a smallboy on a helicopter detachment with 3 H2Ps (copilots), we got into a good 3-day groove with regular morning and evening SSC patrols on the flight schedule:
Day 1:
0540-0600 landing safety officer ("LSO," the station with the glass and metal bubble sticking out of the flight deck, control the RAST and talk on the radios with the helicopter) for morning launch
0920~1000 LSO for morning recovery (lasts about 1/2 hour longer than launch because you have to straighten and traverse the aircraft back into the hangar)
Day 2:
0430-0930 brief and fly a 3.5 (wheels up at 0600, land 0930, waterwash, paperwork, debrief after)
1740-1800 LSO for evening launch
2040~2200 LSO for evening recovery (lasts about 1/2 hour longer than launch because you have to straighten and traverse the aircraft back into the hangar)
Day 3:
1630-2130 brief and fly a 3.5 (wheels up at 1800, land 2130)
And also be the primary shitscreen on weekends/holidays for whatever buffoonery and shenanigans Seaman Snuffy gets into out in town or at home. Waking up Skipper at 2 in the morning because someone got arrested. Rousting YNs out to release OPREP-3 UNIT SITREPs when someone is having suicidal ideations, etc.Monitor the flight schedule throughout the day, coordinate with maintenance control to facilitate changes/aircraft fallout, keep the front office in the loop, and generally if someone is having an in flight emergency, they will radio you to let the squadron know what is going on, and in some cases, to have you read them through emergency procedures or troubleshooting.
And woe betide the SDO who doesn't know the caller ID for their fellow JOs' cell phones. Funny how when people are sitting around the ready room on a maintenance perma-slide bored out of their minds, the number of random "wrong number" calls to the SDO desk spikes.You are also the answering machine for a wide variety of generally "wrong number" type of calls.
And woe betide the SDO who doesn't know the caller ID for their fellow JOs' cell phones. Funny how when people are sitting around the ready room on a maintenance perma-slide bored out of their minds, the number of random "wrong number" calls to the SDO desk spikes.
Is the T-6B hard to fly?
Not nearly as hard as the T-34C. And not nearly as easy as the F/A-18.Is the T-6B hard to fly?
Is the T-6B hard to fly?