Sunday, January 17, 2010

Surprise Flight

Since last week's aborted training exercise, I thought it would be a while before I got to get some more in depth training. The squadron and wing leadership instead decided to try again this weekend. Unfortunately, I had a prior commitment and couldn't make it for most of the day. I figured I'd show up to get some classroom training out of the way and check off at least a few boxes toward either a staff assistant or mission scanner role.

Staff assistant simply refers to an administrative go-fer who can keep track of the mission status and ensure updates make it to the appropriate people and places. The mission scanner role is more interesting, as that is one of the sets of eyeballs in the air during a real search.

Even after arriving so late at the exercise command post, there were still two more training flights on the agenda. With one of the hardest tasks being a trainee on an actual training mission (due to the infrequency of the exercises), it made sense for me to go up and get one of them out of the way. Most positions require at least two training flights, some require three.

I learned a few things from this mission:
- I can retain and recall something I read just once months ago (namely, some of the scanning techniques).
- I can quickly read the manual for a direction-finding radio and make some sense of it just minutes before flying.
- I need to fly more before I would ever feel comfortable in (a) any CAP aircraft, (b) especially the glass cockpit planes.

Even as a "passenger" in the right front seat, with my primary duty being interpreting the direction-finding radio to home in on a training ELT, I felt behind the airplane. This was one of the newer G1000 crafts, and I struggled to keep a glance at the instruments as a secondary backup for the pilot. Part of it is my time away from flying as of late, and of course there is the lack of experience with the Garmin G1000. I have a biennial coming due in February, and I may not even get to fly before then. It will have been five months by the time it rolls around.

On a more positive note, I was able to visually locate our target (a military parachute on the ground) even as the much more experienced pilot said, "That can't be it..." and kept circling the area looking for something else.

2 comments:

DeAnn said...

While in the air recently w ATL control I heard a pilot report an ELT transmitting "really close". We were given a different freq and I didn't hear anything else about it until I mentioned it to one of the Ala CAP pilots. She said," yeah that was us doing some training". That's pretty cool. Good luck with all your adventures.

Papa Echo said...

Thanks. It's pretty interesting, and most people in CAP are learning skills they wouldn't necessarily have otherwise.

For the ELT practice, there are alternate frequencies so as not to trigger any real search and rescue from a 121.5 MHz signal.