Jump to content

Hacker

Supreme User
  • Posts

    2,042
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    90

Posts posted by Hacker

  1. Originally posted by ENJJPT IP:

    I'm curious to know what you think the Achilles Heel is?

    Having two people in the cockpit can sometimes mean that there are two very different SA levels. While the vast majority of the time a 'pitter is able to enhance the SA of the pilot, with one wrong word they can also take it all away in an instant.
  2. Originally posted by rumblefish_2:

    I can just hear the comm: "Goose, where is that missile? Can you see it?" "No! I must ensure this GBU-12 hits the DMPI, forget about our pink bodies...s#@%! You masked my pod!" "Umm, which one of us is supposed to chaff?" This situation may happen once in a fighter pilot's lifetime if he/she's lucky enough to see that much action.

    I've been in just such a situation, threat reacting off a SAM while in the terminal phase of guiding in an LGB. Happened in OIF, April 03. Be happy to show you the video some time...of the target getting shacked.

    BTW, your comm example is yet another indication of your ignorance on the issue. Anything you've experienced with two pilots in the airplane *does not* parallel what it is like to fly with a WSO. Totally different ballgame that is simultaneously the F-15E's biggest strength *and* its Achilles Heel.

  3. Originally posted by Crazy Joe:

    2 seats = suck. There is nothing on earth like flying all by yourself. Fly a 1-seat jet dude. Every single night Hogs and Vipers are flying low without Mama in the back seat helping them.

    Curious...how much time do you have in 2-seat fighters? Yeah...that's about how qualified you are to judge what it's like to fly in one. All you know is what some other Viper driver has told you about it, and what you remember from having IPs sitting behind you in UPT and IFF. Sorry, bro, but flying with a WSO is nothing like flying with an IP in your back seat.

    And, as to capabilities, let's talk about flying low and employing LGBs. I'm interested to hear how many F-16s are doing that, and what their hit rate is.

    (Hint: They're not, and back when they did their hit rate was less than 20%.)

  4. Mission is the *only* reason you should use to determine which fighter to go to.

    Everything else, quite honestly, is basically the same between the airframes.

    As nice as the "My First Viper Ride" story was, it could have been written about damn near any fighter.

  5. What's more important than any of this, is that when you're a Lieutenant...

    NOBODY GIVES A F*CK WHERE YOU GOT YOUR COMMISSION!

    Except, of course, the USAFA guys, who can't let it go and, even later in life as socially dysfunctional O-4s, still ask, "Oh, what squadron were you in" to other Zoomies.

  6. Originally posted by gtyj98:

    oh yeah--you shouldn't be singing those type of songs with "others" on the bus i.e. enlisted or people not in the inner circle of trust.

    Why not? In case they were not aware that the USAF's job was to kill people and break sh*t, they need to be indoctrinated.

    Never can understand people who get offended by sex, drinking, and bad language, when our job is centered around killing.

    People with some bizarre moral heirarchies.

  7. Originally posted by Toro:

    I would argue that WSOs definitely have a higher promotion rate than MX offers based solely on numbers.

    Sorry, Toro, but your observation of the numbers at SJ doesn't reflect the actual statistic...we're talking about *rates* here and not physical numbers of how many people are at each base. Let's do your same # of O-5 WSOs and # of O-5 Maintenance Officers comparison at any base where there are aircraft without Navs, and there would be a different picture. It's a crappy way to make a comparison.

    The actual historical promotion data is available on the AFPC website (http://www.afpc.randolph.af.mil/demographi...eportsearch.asp). Some quick number crunching of promotion rates from 1989 to 2004 revealed:

    Major: Navigators, 85.0%, Mission Support 82.3%

    Lt Col: Navigators 60.5%, Mission Support 66.3%

    Col: Navigators 33.7%, Mission Support 45.0%

    So, looks to me that statistically JLoweCSU's Commander is correct.

  8. I was given a ticket in Tex-ass back when I was in tech school at Sheppard when I was a Lieutenant.

    Like many of you, I offered my military ID along with my driver's license -- my reasoning was a little different, though, because my Washington State license was a military license, with an expiration date of "90 days after discharge." I was offering my mil ID as proof that I was in the military.

    The officer didn't see it that way, and gave me some lip about did I think I was going to get off easy just because I was flashing my military ID??

    When he gave me the ticket, the Tejas DPS guy said "Here's your ID back LIEUTENANT" in the snottiest tone I've ever heard from the po-lice.

    Maybe I should get one of those black stickers with the blue stripe...the "free pass to speed" sticker. <not>

  9. Originally posted by Sean00xj:

    I could miss two days of work, fly to grand junction colorado, rent a car, drive 2 hours to moab utah, next week....I am 100% certain of my speedo error, I have talked with a dozen jeepers that confirm 32 inch tires, with 4.10 gears and a 32 tooth speedo gear equal a 105% readout of actual speed on the speedo. And although not a source of hard evidence every time I drive by a 'your speed is' my speed is say 60 when my speedo shows 67. I'll try calling the DA tomorrow. If the AF wasn't waiting until 2008 to give me a class date I could have stayed in Utah until tomorrow, as I need my job until the AF provides me one I had to be back home in kansas city for work tomorrow.

    Sounds like a reason to just pay the damn ticket and get it over with.
  10. Originally posted by MajorMadMax:

    I just noticed the title of that article and the article itself conflict, but I think the title was in error, it should have read 'Eurofighter Radars Spot F/A-22s'...

    No, I don't think so. The article says, in essence, 'yeah, there are rumors that the Typhoon saw the Raptor...but it didn't, and if it did, it was because it was operating in the ATC config'.
  11. Originally posted by Pogo:

    a gallon of gas costing 18 times more coming out of a tanker than a fuel pump on the ground....

    Gee, ya think? More expensive to get flown around in and dispensed from a '135 or a '10 than just getting pumped out of a tank?
  12. FWIW, I went back and looked at the web page that I created in 1998 discussing the process for applying to UPT. This is what I wrote pertaining to vision requirements -- copied directly from the AFI (at the time):

    - Normal color vision for both pilots and navigators

    - Distant vision - pilots uncorrected to 20/50 and navigators 20/200 but corrected to 20/20

    - Near vision - pilots uncorrected to 20/20; navigators 20/40 but corrected to 20/20

    - Refraction, accommodation and astigmatism requirements have had no corrective eye surgery (i.e. RK surgery)

    [ 23. September 2005, 06:01: Message edited by: Hacker ]

  13. Originally posted by Toro:

    When the shooting war was starting, everybody was too preoccupied with the no-$hit mission to worry about queep.

    Good story, but can't say I agree with this part. There was still plenty of *****ing about reflective belts, flight suit sleeves being rolled up, floppy hats, friday patches, singing 'offensive' songs at the Wagon Wheel, f*cking in the bomb shelters, p*ssing in piddle packs in the tents, etc, even while there was a full-on shooting war going on.

    There is more than enough BS in the Air Force to go around even when we're supposedly 'doing the real mission'.

  14. M=1.6 at 1000' AGL in a F-15E-220 across the Tonopah Test Range on 28 March 2001.

    Part of a Nuclear WSEP, verified by Sandia Nat'l Labs and Department of Energy.

    I think that it was somewhere in the neighborhood of 680 KCAS IIRC.

    For you F-15E guys who might wonder how the f*ck I was able to get a -220 Strike Pig (with a B61 hanging on LC2) up to that speed...let's just say that the speed run began at FL350 in Pahute Mesa all ready well over the Mach, and was achieved via a .8 AOA unloaded descent down to the deck. After hitting 1.6, the speed was decaying by the second after leveling off. It was slowing so quickly that I actually thought I had missed the desired speed for the drop, but the radar cameras verified the speed.

    EDIT: Photo added...

    Tonopah_4.jpg

    [ 13. September 2005, 16:29: Message edited by: Hacker ]

  15. There's no rule on it...there's not even an accepted theory as to the history of it.

    Personally, I don't care if someone does it or not...so long as they can perform when they get to the jet. There's nothing more retarded than looking like a fighter pilot but not being able to act like one when it counts.

    [ 10. September 2005, 05:46: Message edited by: Hacker ]

  16. Originally posted by Rainman A-10:

    Shack.

    I dunno, this part cleared that question up for me:

    The way I was able to free up a TON of time at UPT was to track into the T-1 program after Tweets.
    Reference also the thread from a few weeks ago discussing current UPT washout rates, which are reportedly in the 1-3% range in FY05.
  17. I personally don't see a problem with it. Don't know how other services are, but the USAF is unbelievably overtly-Christian, and has been since the day I enlisted.

    If we're going to practice religious tolerance, then it's time to start practicing it instead of just paying it lip service.

    • Upvote 1
×
×
  • Create New...