![]() When the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola announced that it was restoring an H-2, I looked up the bureau number. It looks just like mine, even with the embossed plastic strip with your last name, first initial and Social Security number stuck to the spine. My son who got his Navy wings in 2002 has a log book that has the same dark blue cover and gold ink that fades over time. Nor can the raw numbers relate to the many hours I spent scaring the hell out of myself and crew learning how to descend to a stable, steady hover 40 feet at night above water that you can’t see and knowing that if one of the engines burps or you have any significant mechanical problem, you are going to get wet and maybe drown.Īnd yes, the Navy still records flight time in log books. This data is great for generating statistics but doesn’t begin to describe my experiences. The information, including the flight purpose code, fills the pages in three colors of ink – black or dark blue for daytime sorties red for night frights, err flights and green for combat missions. All the details are supposedly kept in separate reports, none of which I kept because they were often classified or buried in messages containing statistics, maintenance information, parts orders, etc. There’s no place for notes or brief narrative of what happened in one’s official Navy log book. One – 4R8 the flight purpose code for a night instrument rescue of personal in or out of a hostile fire area – does nothing to convey what happens in the cockpit much less in the back during a combat rescue. In the front of every Navy log book, there are four pages of different flight purpose codes and instructions on how to assign them to a particular flight. Last name of the other guy sitting next to you in the cockpit. ![]() Number and type of approaches and landings and.Total flight time and how much was in night and instrument conditions.Official Navy three digit number/letter flight purpose codes that describes the official purpose of the flight.Looking back through my log books, they are a blur of hand written entries of the: My Navy flight time includes many hours of night, over water operations flights over different types of terrain as well as flying in all sorts of ugly weather as both a co-pilot and as a HAC. This doesn’t include the other three thousand plus pilot-in-command hours in a variety of fixed wing aircraft. The rest is split between about 900 in the H-2 series and 800 hours in H-3s. About 100 of the total is divided between the TH-57A and the UH-1D that I flew as a Student Naval Aviator in the Training Command on my way to getting my wings. My Navy logbooks show that I have about almost 1,900 hours of rotary wing flight time in a variety of Navy helicopters. This portion of the web site has material that is probably not in books on flying or about those helicopters you’d buy and should give you more insight into the world that Josh Haman and Derek Almer lived in. ![]() Since both Josh Haman (the main character Cherubs 2, Big Mother 40, Render Harmless, Forgotten, Inner Look, Moscow Airlift and The Simushir Island Incident) and Derek Almer (Flight of the Pawnee and the follow-on books in this series ) are both helicopter pilots, I thought some my recollections of flying H-2s and H-3s might be interesting. In the Navy, the HAC is responsible for the overall conduct of the mission. HAC stands for Helicopter Aircraft Commander.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |