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    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...
    Rested and Ready 0 Aviation
    USACRC Editor

    Rested and Ready

    Showing up to the mission in a fatigued state is unacceptable. This happens all too often in aviation. One of my recent flight manuals stated: “A pilot must show up to work free of stress.” Although we may not be stress-free, we may...
    Crosswalk Catastrophes 0 PMV-4
    USACRC Editor

    Crosswalk Catastrophes

    Since I am lucky enough to live in an area with year-round nice weather, I have eschewed the treadmill and opted to trek the sidewalks near my home. Now that I am spending more time as a pedestrian, I’ve discovered many drivers do not...

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    A Feline FOD Check

    A Feline FOD Check

    CHIEF WARRANT OFFICER 4 MARK CHAMBERLIN
    4-58th Aviation Operations Battalion
    Camp Humphreys, South Korea

    Foreign object damage on a military aircraft is a serious issue. Before every mission, the entire flight crew, which is five personnel on a CH-47, checks for foreign object debris (FOD) and ensures the aircraft is ready for the mission. Depending on the crew, preflight can take anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour and a half. It is supposed to be a thorough process. During deployments, however, you get into a battle rhythm and things can go unnoticed due to the monotony of day-after-day operations. In any military aviation setting, that can be devastating.

    A few years ago, I was deployed to Jalalabad, Afghanistan, in Regional Command-East. It was a typical day; we woke up, went to chow and received the brief for our mission. After our brief, we headed out to the aircraft, where the flight engineer, crew chief and door gunner were already getting it ready. I climbed up and began conducting the preflight/FOD check on the upper half of the aircraft, which took about a half hour. By the time I climbed back down, the others were finished.

    I grabbed my checklist and started the pre-mission brief to the rest of the crew. Everyone was confident about the mission and we put on our gear. The crew chief then climbed on top of the aircraft to ensure everything was secure as I did a walk-around on the bottom to make sure it was ready for startup and takeoff. Everything was going as planned. There were no surprises — as it should be since we had been doing this mission set for several months and there wasn’t anything that was outside the norm.

    After my walk-around and confirmation from the crew chief that the aircraft was ready to go up top, we climbed into the cockpit. I took the right seat and adjusted my mirror so I had a good view of the back of the aircraft. Once on battery power, we continued with the checklist and there were still no issues. Then everything went awry.

    The left-seat pilot cleared the auxiliary power unit (APU), which is very loud, and the crew chief stated it was clear to start. When the APU came to life with a thunderous scream, something darted out from underneath the front-right seat of the cabin area. I saw it out of the corner of my eye but wasn’t sure what it was. I asked the crew chief, “What the hell was that?” Once he finished laughing, he said a cat had been hiding under the seat. The APU startled the cat, causing him to run off the aircraft. The rest of the crew also found this to be extremely funny. However, the realization that we’d missed a cat during our preflight checks made us wonder what else we could have overlooked.

    As a crew, we collectively decided to shut down the APU and take another look at the aircraft. Fortunately, we didn’t find another cat or any other types of FOD that could have caused a disaster on a typically mundane mission. That cat ended up becoming our mascot for the rest of the deployment. He visited us in the crew shed every couple of days, but he never set foot on another aircraft. Having him around served as a reminder to always conduct thorough FOD checks before every mission.

    • 14 April 2024
    • Author: USACRC Editor
    • Number of views: 347
    • Comments: 0
    Categories: On-DutyAviation
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