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#11
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Ronald Gardner wrote: Yes CAP requires a lot of training! However in order to do the job correctly and professionally it is the only way. You don't want to be a yahoo do gooder that can't find a downed pilot that you should have found and then try to explain it to the family why you failed. Here in Montana we don't really let CAP do search and rescue. The Montana Aeronautics Division along with the Montana Pilots Assoc handles the search and rescue duties when needed. They have a training class each September that teaches all the necessary things about SAR. No stupid nomex suits when it's hot out either. Any licensed pilot in Montana can take the class and when SAR is needed they now have a database of qualified pilots all over the state that can be in the air in a very short time. |
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#12
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"Newps" wrote in message ... Here in Montana we don't really let CAP do search and rescue. The Montana Aeronautics Division along with the Montana Pilots Assoc handles the search and rescue duties when needed. --------------------------------------reply----------------------------------------------------- How is the alerting routed to the pilot's association? In CAP, it comes from the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center at Langley. Other places handle "Search and Rescue" or "Search and Locate" without CAP involvement. What type of ground team coordination do you have in Montana? We always say that we can search, but someone on the ground has to rescue. I flew a mission last Thursday where the ground team was the local Sheriff's Deputies and members of the volunteer fire department. CAP has adopted an Incident Command response and multi-agency missions has become the norm. Thanks, Stephen |
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#13
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Hotel 179 wrote: "Newps" wrote in message ... Here in Montana we don't really let CAP do search and rescue. The Montana Aeronautics Division along with the Montana Pilots Assoc handles the search and rescue duties when needed. --------------------------------------reply----------------------------------------------------- How is the alerting routed to the pilot's association? At CAP, it comes from the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center at Langley. Other places handle "Search and Rescue" or "Search and Locate" without CAP involvement. Montana Aeronautics gets the call when the RCC decides to initiate SAR. The RCC is not the only one to initiate it either, just one of several. What type of ground team coordination do you have in Montana? We always say that we can search, but someone on the ground has to rescue. I flew a mission last Thursday where the ground team was the local Sheriff's Deputies and members of the volunteer fire department. CAP has adopted an Incident Command response and multi-agency missions has become the norm. It's all handled thru Montana Aeronautics. They will figure out who best to handle the ground stuff. It may be the local sherriff, it may be other SAR qualified pilots working on the ground. It depends on where the wreck is believed to be. We have some pretty remote country here, both in the mounatins and in the plains. |
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#14
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"Newps" wrote in message ... .. We have some pretty remote country here, both in the mounatins and in the plains. -----------------------------------------------reply--------------------------------------------------- We have some pretty remote country here in Alabama....there's the one mountain up in the north part of the state that is nearly 1500'. Some of the beach in our area is so remote that you have to carry the beer cooler nearly 200 yards before you reach the sand. Very unforgiving territory! Stephen Foley, Alabama |
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#15
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"Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... I'm still pretty new in CAP. One thing I've realized is that it takes at least a year or two before you can actually fly missions. My impressions are that there is a lot of paperwork and beaurocratic BS involved in CAP. I don't believe it's any different in other similar organzations though. It's not for everyone, that's for sure. There are quite a few hoops to jump through on your way to becoming a mission pilot, but once you are there, you get to fly quite a lot. The training and testing is not particularly hard either. Yeah, it will take some time to complete the training, but not necessarily a year or two. I would say that you could be a mission pilot in under six months if you have the minimum hours and the squadron flies enough practice missions. Getting the missions required is usually the bottleneck at our squadron. I feel the need to say something........ I do get generally irritated by those who love to take pot shots at CAP. I don't know where that comes from, but I wish it would stop. It's a good organization made up of volunteers giving back to their community. We are doing positive things for young folks as well. It's not perfect, but I just don't understand why there's got to be some yahoo that comes on this newgroup to tear down CAP whenever it's mentioned. There. I feel better. We had a member who came from the CG Aux. He compared the two favorably and didn't express a lot of misgivings about coming to CAP. He was a non-pilot though. Hope this helps. -Trent PP-ASEL |
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#16
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In article .com,
Robert M. Gary wrote: I'm also told that Nomex is 100% required for all missions. I guess we had a CAP flight go down a while back and some guys burned. Of course, just like anything else you can wear either the AF Nomex or the CAP Nomex. CAP is blue, AF is olive, both feel great when its 110F outside I'm not in CAP any more (too much paper work and politics, not enough of actually doing anything useful). The crash you refer to involved one of the guys in the squadron I was in then, and two other guys from the local group. The two other guys didn't make it, the guy from my squadron spent a few months in the burn unit and was not able to regain use of one of his hands. He was wearing nomex, but most of the serious burns were on his face and hands. He was the back seat scanner, and after getting out, tried to pull the two pilots out through the flames. Nomex is only fire resistant, and not heat resistant. It buys you a few seconds, but unless you are wearing a thick race car driver style suit, you need to get out quick. The plane they were looking for had crashed a week earlier and was not found until two days after the CAP plane went down. No flight plan was filed for the flight over the mountains, and the ELT did not activate. The ELT not activating is typical of an actual crash. When I was in CAP, and I doubt the stats have changed much, 99+% of ELT signals were false alarms, and ELTs failed to activate in ~97% of crashes. In the 15 years I spent in CAP, I'm only directly[1] aware of one ELT signal leading to an actual aircraft in distress[2]. Anecdotal evidence, but my experience doing the 2am search for the UPS truck or other false alarms[3] made it pretty clear that in the absence of an alert notice (ALNOT), an ELT signal was likely a false alarm. Plane being searched for: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief2.asp?...FA031& akey=1 CAP plane: http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief2.asp?...GA029& akey=1 John [1] I knew the guys that found the downed plane and the survivor. [2] Setting the ELT off when moving the wreckage doesn't count. [3] Many false alarms are not even actual ELT but are random malfunctioning electronic devices (copy machines, computers, fax machines, video games, pizza ovens) -- John Clear - http://www.clear-prop.org/ |
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#17
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I was in CG Aux in San Diego and found it to be an absolutely wonderful
experience. The members of the squadron were some of the finest and best pilots I've ever been privileged to know. The social events were absolutely great -- dinner at the officer's club at the local Navy base once a month, parties on the slightest pretext, and other really good times. A minimum of BS paperwork and a maximum of flight training and operations. I joined CG Aux in Sacramento on the strength of my San Diego experience ... what a mistake. Maximize the paperwork, minimize the flying, and if you don't have a twin, you ain't in the old boy's club. A 182 is penny ante. You got your CG bars and your CG wings in San Diego? Sorry, you get to go through OUR little drill with reams of paperwork and busy work before we let you in the door. I have never been in CAP so can't comment on that. Jim "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... I've also noticed that we have a Coast Guard Auxiliary in town (Sacramento) with an active aviation unit. What is the difference to a pilot (in terms of training, missions, aircraft) between CG and AF aux? BTW: I heard rumor that CG aux get full BX priv's while CAP only get uniform BX privs. -Robert, CFI |
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#18
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Trent,
My view of the CAP is colored by the fact that about the only time I see them is the cadets at OSH. Marching in formation, harness's loaded down with loads of crap (200' of rope, I'd swear), etc. I can't help cracking a smile or giving a chuckle when I see a bunch of them marching by. OTOH, they do act like perfect normal teenagers/young people when they are not on duty. ![]() Someday, I'd like to ride along when they track down errant ELT's on the ground. I watched them as they homed in on a piper that must have had one on. John |
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#19
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Robert M. Gary wrote:
I'm still pretty new in CAP. One thing I've realized is that it takes at least a year or two before you can actually fly missions. There are lots and lots and lots of training courses and certifications you much receive first. BTW: I heard rumor that CG aux get full BX priv's while CAP only get uniform BX privs. -Robert, CFI Do you mean PX instead of BX? I get the impression that different CAP chapters (or whatever they are called) vary greatly. A few years ago I went to a gathering of the local group that was advertised in the paper as a "get to know the local CAP" function. I expressed some interest, even commented that the various training classes would be interesting and understood that a lot of steps needed completion before I'd fly. Despite having more actual flying experience than most of the members there, it became obvious that they weren't interested in more pilots potentially taking away from their flying fun. Another pilot got the same vibes. The group seemed more interested in promoting their cadet program and strutting around in their uniforms. I'm glad that other groups are not the same. |
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#20
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On Mon, 1 Aug 2005 09:28:28 -0700, "RST Engineering"
wrote: snip... I have never been in CAP so can't comment on that. Jim I was in the CAP many years ago. It was great. I flew their L-16 for practically nothing. Even nothing on missions. A couple of years ago I went to some meetings and was ready to re-join. The people are still great, but I just couldn't stand the paperwork. That is a shame, and it's nothing I can change. What's even worse is that I don't agree with the way they fly their airplanes. I cringe when I have a student in the pattern and have to fit in with their 172s. They fly patterns that would make a 747 look like it was flying an especially conservative pattern. Maybe that's just their style, with 4 hour pre-flights and such, but I just don't get it. Mike Weller |
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