Monday, November 24, 2014

Advanced Airframe - UH60A/L Part 2 - Flying

Me and My Stick Buddy in the A/L Course
We went through prep phase and learned how to start the helicopter, emergency procedures, limitations, how the systems work, and performance planning.  Now it was time to start flying.  Before I get into that I'll mention a couple of the differences between Primary/Instruments and the UH60 course.

First off, you do not have academics and flightline on the same day.  That means your days are a little bit shorter.  However, there is so much more to learn that I actually spent more time in the library in the first few weeks of the 60 course than I did at any point up until then.  Also, you will get put on either a morning or afternoon flightline schedule and it will stay that way the entire course.  You don't have to flip flop every other week like in primary.  Another big change is that you can drive yourself and you don't have to wait for that stupid white bus anymore!  Oh, and remember all those daily questions you had to do in primary and instruments and answer from memory in front of the whole class?  Yeah, you still have to do those.  Every. day.  They are actually pretty in depth and really make you get into the books and study.

The first part of the 60 course is called Contact.  It's like Primary for the 60.  It's 5 weeks long and
you'll spend a lot of time at stagefields.  You'll learn how to do all the maneuvers that you already learned in the TH-67 or LUH-72 in the UH-60.  You'll also learn new maneuvers and of course EPs (Emergency Procedures).  You'll continue to do table talk with your IP every day.  The first day on the flight line also includes a 5&9 test.  Unlike the 5&9 test you had in prep phase, this one requires a higher score to pass and you are actually making your first impression on your IP.  The standard for passing a 5&9 test is 90%.  We also had a surprise 5&9 test on a weather day where we couldn't fly.  

After about week 3, you start leave the stagefield a little bit and work in RTs and do multi-ship flights.  At the end of contact, your class will plan a multi-ship air assault.  Every other class gets an actual mission while the other class just has a notional mission.  If you get the actual mission, you will be moving Ranger Students for the swamp phase of Ranger training in Eglin, Florida.  I didn't get that mission, unfortunately, so we just planned as if we were going to be picking up passengers, and then did the air assault picking up notional passengers.  At the end of contact, there is a checkride which consists of maneuvers at a stagefield.

After contact, you move on to instruments.  Instruments is only 2 weeks long and it's mostly about learning to use the GPS and the Command Instrument System (CIS) to fly instruments efficiently in the Blackhawk.  At the end of those 2 weeks there's another checkride and then it's on to the M model.

UPDATE: As of 2016, there is no longer a combined A/L and M combined course like there was when I went through.  Selection includes either the A/L model or the M model, and you do all of the advanced airframe course in that model of aircraft.