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#1
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GREEN CARD
I held an instrument "green" card when I was in the Navy. I know you had to
have something like 2500 hours before you took the ride for it but can't remember what else it was for. Anyone remember? Or is it still around. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#2
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GREEN CARD
"B.C. MALLAM" wrote...
I held an instrument "green" card when I was in the Navy. I know you had to have something like 2500 hours before you took the ride for it but can't remember what else it was for. Anyone remember? Or is it still around. The "Special Instrument Rating" allowed you to take off with less than 200-1/2 weather (300-1 without PAR available). Most of us who had one never used the capability -- we were smart enough by then to know it was REALLY stoopid! :-) Ours were blue, not green. The CO or Ops O punched a hole in it with a paper punch. The added wisdom upon presentation was, "Hold the card up to the sky. If the color in the hole matches, you can take off." |
#3
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GREEN CARD
"B.C. MALLAM" wrote:
I held an instrument "green" card when I was in the Navy. I know you had to have something like 2500 hours before you took the ride for it but can't remember what else it was for. Anyone remember? Or is it still around. It's been 30+ years since I was in a squadron with pilots who held/needed green cards, but going from memory, it allowed you to sign off on your own IFR flight plans for cross-country flights using the civilian ATC system. Governing directive for USN/USMC was OPNAVINST 3710.7x [unsure of the .7, and the x would be a capital letter indicating edition. Last time I worked with that general NATOPS "bible", it was up to K or something like that.] 25-1/2 years out of the USMC, and as I said, 30+ years since I was in a squadron which had pilots holding/needing Special instrument ratings, I don't know whether it still exists, was replaced by some other system, or what. Struck out on trying to find OPNAVINST 3710.7 on the Navy website. Or any Navy directives for that matter. -- OJ III |
#4
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GREEN CARD
It's been 30+ years since I was in a squadron with pilots who
held/needed green cards, but going from memory, it allowed you to sign off on your own IFR flight plans for cross-country flights using the civilian ATC system. I got out of the Marines in 1954. In the early '50s, the above was true. Some pilots in my squadron refused to accept a Green Card for precisely that reason. They didn't want to be put into a situation in which the Skipper would say, "Come on, we need someone to go, and you've got a Green Card, you can go even though it's below mins." vince norris |
#5
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GREEN CARD
"Boomerang" wrote:
Is my memory correct? It won't be the first time that I have the fuzzy disease. And it won't be the last time. Worse, they'll become more frequent. [And sometimes, more convenient, too. ;-] -- OJ III |
#6
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GREEN CARD
Boomerang wrote:
I recall the Green Card being pretty much a requirement for dark- and-stormy-night flying.... I had only a White Card (got out before I had enough time for a Green Card), but my squadron had a policy that we should do half of our flying at night, whether it was VMC or IMC. IOW, if we flew to NXX in daylight, we should wait till dusk to fly back home. Of course, if wx went below IFR mins, I could not take off. I don't recall that happening very often. and did, indeed, shoot my share of below white-card minimum approaches...... However, once we were airborne, we could shoot approaches back home (NKT, Cherry Point) regardless of the weather, because they had GCA. I can't recall if there were any GCA mins, or not; but I can recall shooting some interesting approaches. around 1975 or thereabouts, formerly "bold" pilots who now were "old" pilots got a pass on both flight time and instrument cards. Is my memory correct? It won't be the first time that I have the fuzzy disease. That was 20 years after I got out so I don't know. I have the fuzzy disease too, but the above is what I remember--I think. vince norris |
#7
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GREEN CARD
"vincent norris" wrote...
However, once we were airborne, we could shoot approaches back home (NKT, Cherry Point) regardless of the weather, because they had GCA. I can't recall if there were any GCA mins, or not; but I can recall shooting some interesting approaches. GCA PAR mins were 200-1/2; 100-1/4 at the boat if you were "special" and dual-piloted... |
#8
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GREEN CARD
John Weiss wrote:
"vincent norris" wrote... However, once we were airborne, we could shoot approaches back home (NKT, Cherry Point) regardless of the weather, because they had GCA. I can't recall if there were any GCA mins, or not; but I can recall shooting some interesting approaches. GCA PAR mins were 200-1/2; 100-1/4 at the boat if you were "special" and dual-piloted... Mea Culpa; I think I cheated on those mins more than once. Come to think of it, I recall shooting what we then called ADF approaches (now called NDB approaches) to 200 - 1/4. Years later, I began to think I must have "misremembered" that, but then I read Bob Buck's _Weather Flying_, in which he confirms that ADF mins were 200 - 1/4 in those days. vince norris |
#9
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GREEN CARD
"vincent norris" wrote...
GCA PAR mins were 200-1/2; 100-1/4 at the boat if you were "special" and dual-piloted... Mea Culpa; I think I cheated on those mins more than once. Come to think of it, I recall shooting what we then called ADF approaches (now called NDB approaches) to 200 - 1/4. Years later, I began to think I must have "misremembered" that, but then I read Bob Buck's _Weather Flying_, in which he confirms that ADF mins were 200 - 1/4 in those days. Slow airplanes, low mins? ;-) Maybe people were smart enough to keep skyscrapers and radio towers away from the airports back then. Developers and guvamint offishuls have gotten stupider since... |
#10
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GREEN CARD
I read Bob Buck's _Weather Flying_, in which he confirms that ADF mins
were 200 - 1/4 in those days. Slow airplanes, low mins? ;-) Yeah, the slower you go, the longer it takes to fly a quarter-mile. Maybe people were smart enough to keep skyscrapers and radio towers away from the airports back then. It was a long time ago, but I don't recall that there was much sticking up around military fields in those days. One exception was that there were two tall chimneys dead ahead, about a mile, when one was taking off on runway 36 at NAS Anacostia. Easy to avoid in VMC, and I never had to go in there on an IMC day. Developers and guvamint offishuls have gotten stupider since... Plenty of evidence of that! vince norris |
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