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![]() Plane guard. ASR is Anti-surface Recce (I *think*). I never paid much attention to that particular acronym. Armed Surface Recce (I *think*) |
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M. B. wrote:
Plane guard. ASR is Anti-surface Recce (I *think*). I never paid much attention to that particular acronym. Armed Surface Recce (I *think*) Give Air-Sea Rescue a shot. (After all, that's what the Plane Guard does) -- Pete Stickney Java Man knew nothing about coffee. |
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Originally (in the Air Plan I saw) it was listed as "PG/ASR GUNNEX",
and the helo was in the air the whole day, with some hot refuelings and crew switches - so that makes sense. Other helos were Alert 30 SAR (1 plane) and Alert 60 CSAR (2 planes), with 2 other relieving the CSAR alert for a few hours while flying TERF mission. I saw no ASW helo missions. As far as I catched the general idea of the plan, I can distinguish several groups of missions the - "offensive combat", incl. REC, CAS/XCAS, EW/XEW, SEAD, With some others their existence I can only guess: DAS, FAC, ASuW, OCA, escort?... By the way - I guess "XCAS" is an "extended-range CAS" (refueled en-route to the target) - not a "CAS on unspecified target"??? - "defensive combat", including all DCA and AEW flights, - "alerts" and "spares" (which can easily turn into the above mentioned categories), - "combat support", like MTKR/RTKR, With the Vikings gone, their brave crews flying 12 to 18 tanker missions a day WITH ONLY 8 PLANES, a single F/A-18E squadron (now becoming the main organic tanker asset for each CVW) certainly will have a lot of "5-Wet" flying to do! - "training", like ULT or BMB, - "maintenance flights" (FCF or aircraft transfer), - others, including fixed-wing logistics and helo-specific. Best regards, Jacek Doug Woody and Erin Beal wrote: On 5/14/05 4:40 AM, in article , "Peter Stickney" wrote: M. B. wrote: Plane guard. ASR is Anti-surface Recce (I *think*). I never paid much attention to that particular acronym. Armed Surface Recce (I *think*) Give Air-Sea Rescue a shot. (After all, that's what the Plane Guard does) I think that M.B. Is right. Armed Surface Recce sounds familiar (again, not a rotary winged guy). IIRC, it was a way to put some readiness points into the PG function--i.e. Between launches, they'd go off and do ASR and be back at the ship NLT 5 minutes prior to the first launch. --Woody |
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