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On Mar 24, 11:22*am, "kirk.stant" wrote:
On Mar 24, 11:30*am, Brad wrote: On Mar 23, 8:03*am, " wrote: There is a LOT of history regarding the amazingly wasteful procurement and use of glider/motorglider/light aircraft resources in the USAF(A) that JS and others have direct knowledge of. *Thus the perceived negativity of their posts. I am sure that everyone will agree that soaring is a fantastic introduction to aviation for the Cadets but like most .gov entitites many people with direct knowledge believe that they have not spent our resources very effectively. But heck, what's $5 million? *It's for the children. ![]() How does getting training in a DG-1000 prepare young kids when it's likely all they will do is sit behind a monitor and fire missiles via a Predator! But, I am in full agreement, if it's for the children it must be a good thing! And that would be the children making the gliders as well as those flying them....booooyah! Brad For one thing, Brad, the Predator pilot doesn't target the weapons - that's done by the sensor operator. *The pilots job is the same as if he were physically sitting in the Predator - he flies it where it's needed and maneuvers it as required to get in a position to employ it's weapons or support the troops on the ground. *So having experience in a DG-1000 is excellent training - it probably flies more like a predator than anything else in the Air Force inventory. But equally important, it's about motivation and acquiring "air sense" early on in a pilots career - If those DG-1000 rides at the Zoo result in an AF pilot staying in for 20 instead of bailing to the airlines, then the price of the gliders is insignificant! And if a skill learned in a DG-1000 later saves a B-2 or F-22, that would be well worth it. I'm glad to see the Academy acquire a fleet of modern gliders, and support an active XC, contest, and acro program (something it couldn't do when it was stuck with those nasty Schweizers!). *I think it would be cool if all the service academies had glider programs and teams that competed. Kirk 66 USAFA 74 Hear! hear! |
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At 17:22 24 March 2011, kirk.stant wrote:
I'm glad to see the Academy acquire a fleet of modern gliders, and support an active XC, contest, and acro program (something it couldn't do when it was stuck with those nasty Schweizers!). When they had their 1-26s, they always competed. I thought it was amusing how they noted their off-field landings in the 26s. Each one had a little row of Holstein cow stickers below the cockpit rail, one for each outlanding. And acro in gliders as a sport makes about as much sense as up-hill skiing. Jim Beckman |
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