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#11
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An unrelated to this dicusion but never the less overdue (just saw it in
Naval Aviation News) congratulations on your COC. Nothing beats CO of a reserve or adversary squadron. So Woody's now the CO of a reserve or adversary squadron? Congrats! Which one? |
#12
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I'm a CASS (Consolidated Automated Support System) op/maintainer. CASS has
taken over all the various test benches the navy used to use and now tests 90% of the avionics coming out of birds with the other 10% in offload testing. You probably worked in shop 3? Anyway, I work in shop 8, used to be the VAST shop, don't know if they had that in '72. Our strike/ECM shop was a bunch of goofballs/slackers, hope yours was better ;-). I'm just doin' my job... Jason "Jim" wrote in message ... Jason, What was you job? I was an AT2 (way back "in-the-day") on the America in '72, in AIMD ECM shop. I also felt that we contributed to the overall effort off the coast of RVN. Thanks for your service. Jim |
#13
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Jason,
My AIMD ECM shop was top notch. We did major maintenance on the ECM gear from all the squadron aircraft. I was the night supervisor and had a great group of guys. Made working 16 to 18 hours a day bearable. Don't remember VAST. We worked on ALQ100, ALE25, APR25 and 27 ALQ41 - I think those numbers are correct. There was a separate shop for the VAQ EA6Bs and a radio shop. Jim |
#14
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Oh boy, yeah, all that stuff's way gone. The only ECM stuff we really work
on any more is ALQ 99s, the EA-6B pods. At least that's all I know about. The ECM shop was very hush-hush and we never found out much about what went on in there. All I know is there are four locks to get through before you could get into that shop :-|. I don't know how the America was set up but we had 10 shops + cal lab, Shop 1 is generators, 2 is FLIR/ATFLIR, 3 is strike/ECM, 4 is 2M/cable repair, 5 is ATE (automated test equipment), 6 is the AE (aviation electrician's mates, wires/power generation) shop, 7 is RADAR, 8 is CASS, 9 is COMM/ALQ-99, 10 is IATS (intermediate avionics test set) (part of shop 8). We used to have a TARPS shack but since the Tomcat's gone there's not much use for that, is there? :-P Jason "Jim" wrote in message ... Jason, My AIMD ECM shop was top notch. We did major maintenance on the ECM gear from all the squadron aircraft. I was the night supervisor and had a great group of guys. Made working 16 to 18 hours a day bearable. Don't remember VAST. We worked on ALQ100, ALE25, APR25 and 27 ALQ41 - I think those numbers are correct. There was a separate shop for the VAQ EA6Bs and a radio shop. Jim |
#15
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Having a TS shop with a lot of locks was great while on ship. We worked on
the ECM gear and the IFF crypto keys so the shop was like a vault. No one could get in without being on the list. Had a young BIG marine guard to enforce the policy. MAAs couldn't get in even the leading CPO couldn't come into the workbench area. Needless to say - we had fun with that. FOOD, DRINK and MUSIC and it only got up to 80 degrees there. Life was good! ;( |
#16
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Jim wrote:
Having a TS shop with a lot of locks was great while on ship. We worked on the ECM gear and the IFF crypto keys so the shop was like a vault. No one could get in without being on the list. Had a young BIG marine guard to enforce the policy. MAAs couldn't get in even the leading CPO couldn't come into the workbench area. Needless to say - we had fun with that. FOOD, DRINK and MUSIC and it only got up to 80 degrees there. Life was good! ;( Just wanted you guys to know how much I've enjoyed reading this thread. Please keep posting. As much as I like the stuff that begins "There I was, out of airspeed and ideas," I also enjoy hearing from the people who kept 'em flying. |
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