Monday, April 28, 2008
27 Apr
Dust H 93 L 75
Thursday, April 17, 2008
17 Apr
So much for the end of the dust - the worst one of the year so far rolled in last night. I can tell if the dust is back when I wake up because my throat will be dry and I can taste the dust (not to mention the fact it is all over my pillow). It was that way this morning plus the wind was rattling the windows so I knew it was a good one. Right now I can’t see more than bout 50 yards. I was supposed to fly today but the decision not to was pretty easy. Instead I took the opportunity to finish up fixing the cooling systems in the aircraft. They now work in all the cockpits. The guys in the back have the same setup but they think it is too much of a pain to get it running and not worth the effort. They might change their minds once the 120F days hit and we are staying cool up front. Between the dust and lack of missions there hasn’t been much going on. 081 is all packaged up and ready for shipping so the maintainers are all waiting for us to fly some more hours and drop the next aircraft into phase. The newest fad over here is horseshoes. We have two sets over here (the one that I brought is holding up quite well – thanks parents). Whenever the weather is even halfway decent you can hear them clanking away in the back. The dust does keep the temperature down – yesterday was 106.
Dust H 82 L 76
Friday, April 11, 2008
Saturday, April 5, 2008
5 Apr
We are pretty much just going through the motions over here. Our flying has developed a pattern with dust storms rolling in every three or four days. The last couple have only lasted for a day so we may be approaching the end. Yesterday was the ninth month mark in our deployment. I read with some amusement that later this summer the Pentagon is hoping to reduce deployments to 12 months followed by 12 months at home. The concern is that the current situation is unsustainable but I don’t see how a year deployed for a year at home is sustainable either. Who would want to make a career of the military when you are going to spend half of it deployed? You are not going to get the best and brightest that’s for sure. I find it just a tad ironic that this is all under the same administration that vowed to not become engaged in nation building like the previous one did in Kosovo. Looking back on my three deployments to that country I can safely say that they kept their promise – this is nothing like Kosovo. These days Kosovo would hardly even qualify as a training exercise. Ah – the innocence of youth – if we only knew what was in store.
Nothing much to report on the flying side. I have done a few long day missions but nothing out of the ordinary. Maintenance is going well and yesterday Brian gave me my MTP check ride, his first as a ME. We were worried about weather rolling in so we did the whole test flight backwards (flight checks, hover checks, and then ground checks). It made it interesting and we figured if I could do it backwards then I must know it well enough :) The test flight was on 081 which we are dropping into phase early because of sheet metal problems. For some reason it is developing a lot of cracks up by the aft rotor head. Rivets are popping out and a couple of stringers cracked in half. All that was repaired and I flew it a couple of days ago on a seven hour mission. After landing we inspected it and the stringers had new cracks, so there is a bigger problem. Rather than limp it along to phase we decided to just drop it now which will give us a few extra days to work on it.
Cloudy H 88 L 62