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    A Mountainous Mistake 0 Sports & Recreation
    USACRC Editor

    A Mountainous Mistake

    Colorado is known for its beautiful mountains and scenery. The state probably has more miles of hiking trails than it does roads. If you live there and want to call yourself a seasoned hiker, there are a few treks you must make.

    Tablet Trouble 0 Aviation
    USACRC Editor

    Tablet Trouble

    With the growing need for information at our fingertips, aviators lean heavily on electronic devices in the cockpit. All publications related to flying duties can now be replaced by a kneeboard-sized iPad Mini, which is incredibly convenient....
    Railhead Ops: Back to Basics 0 Military Ops & Training
    USACRC Editor

    Railhead Ops: Back to Basics

    Rail remains a vital part of the deployment process. During past deployment operations, the Army relied on contractors to do the majority of the loading. But with the focus on large-scale combat operations, a unit’s Soldiers will be...

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    Who's Flying the Aircraft?

    Who's Flying the Aircraft?

    CHIEF WARRANT OFFICER 2 ADAM EPLEY
    1st Squadron, 17th Cavalry Regiment
    Fort Bragg, North Carolina

    I showed up at my first assignment as an aviator right as we were headed out the door for a deployment in Regional Command East. I was excited and nervous. My Readiness Level 3 to 2 progression took two flights and suddenly I was flying combat missions with my troop standardization pilot. Flight school had given me just enough experience to make me dangerous, so there were good days where I was nearly competent, and bad days where I was a liability in the cockpit.

    Our SP and commander decided the best place for me was on one of our night shifts at a time of day when the enemy was less active, allowing me to get more experience before throwing me into the fray. It was on one of these early morning flights that I nearly killed us.

    We were departing the forward arming and refueling point. I was in the left seat, doing my best to run the mast mounted sight, when appropriate, and trying to change radios when needed. My SP needed to adjust his goggles and transferred the controls. Now I was flying, brand new, almost zero illumination.

    Our trail aircraft was talking with our SP about what our plan was for the rest of the mission when his floor mic got stuck. He couldn’t stop transmitting, so he was in the right seat, stomping on the floor and trying to fix the problem. We climbed out of the departure end when trail came over our alternate internal radio frequency, asking if everything is all right. I reached forward to change my radio, but not having much experience flying in a full kit, the body armor and magazines I had strapped to my chest pushed the cyclic forward, so much that I put us in a 500-foot-per-minute rate of descent.

    My SP realized what I'd done and yanked back on the cyclic, arresting the descent. I released the controls, thinking that he'd taken them back, even though we hadn't positively transferred them. At this point, no one was flying the aircraft. He told me to make a correction, which confused me, since I thought he was flying. We both realized what was going on at the same time, at which point, he took the controls and flew us back to the parking area. We were done for the day.

    This experience has been shared as part of my crew brief every time I fly with a new pilot. My unfamiliarity with my gear, coupled with my inexperience as a junior aviator put us in a dangerous situation and could have easily gotten us killed. I got a red “U” in my records that day, but, fortunately, we didn't damage the aircraft and lived to fly another day.

    • 1 December 2015
    • Author: Army Safety
    • Number of views: 10579
    • Comments: 0
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