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#1
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I was speaking with a couple of Global Hawk pilots at Beale this
weekend and got some interesting information. The information was presented to me as public (non-classified). The first thing that surprised me is that contrary to whatI had heard previously the aircraft has no traffic avoidance systems at all. There is a bay for a civilian TCAS unit but as of yet none have been installed. The pilot reported that certification of TCAS was interrupted because TCAS resolutions require 30 degree of bank and the GH is limited to 15. However, he also said that they do not do any training below class A airspace in the U.S. The TFR is for the 5 minutes it takes for the climb out. The reason the TFRs stay in affect so long is because the GH is a single engine aircraft it could possibly return to base if it lost the engine and that the FAA required the TFR to deal with that possibility. However, I've found that I have never been denied access through the TFR by ATC. The pilot also said that they are all very confused as to why the GH is based out of an area of such high air traffic. He said he thought the military was originally going to base them out of an island owned by the Navy off the cost of LA where there is really no GA traffic. He also said that although they can log their flight time for military hours they mean nothing for airlines and that even though a GH assignment is considered prestigious, pilots who think they'll end up flying for the airlines avoid the project. At this moment they don't have another plane for currency (the U-2 pilots have the T-38's to fly for currency), but that they are hoping to get some T-6's brought in so they can keep up their stick/rudder stills. The GH is a very cool aircraft. GH's in theatre are based in UAE but only the takeoff and landing pilots actually have to be in UAE. The pilots who are flying the GH over Iraq at this moment are sitting, drinking coffee, in California. They fly in 3 hour shifts. They are limited to 3 hours mostly because there are so many pilots the 3 hours is the only way for everyone to get time. However, they don't just get up and walk off to go the bathroom. ![]() mostly by mouse, not yoke. -Robert |
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In article . com,
"Robert M. Gary" wrote: I was speaking with a couple of Global Hawk pilots at Beale this weekend and got some interesting information. The information was presented to me as public (non-classified). T'ain't a pilot if you aren't in the aircraft. :-) The first thing that surprised me is that contrary to whatI had heard previously the aircraft has no traffic avoidance systems at all. There is a bay for a civilian TCAS unit but as of yet none have been installed. The pilot reported that certification of TCAS was interrupted because TCAS resolutions require 30 degree of bank and the GH is limited to 15. um, no. TCAS II resolutions are vertical only. No TCAS II resolution requires a turn. TCAS II azimuth information simply isn't accurate enough to support horizontal guidance. -- Bob Noel (goodness, please trim replies!!!) |
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote: The TFR is for the 5 minutes it takes for the climb out. 5 minutes to FL180? |
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On Oct 1, 3:19 pm, "Dan Luke" wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote: The TFR is for the 5 minutes it takes for the climb out. 5 minutes to FL180? About 5,000 fpm I was told. |
#5
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 1, 3:19 pm, "Dan Luke" wrote: "Robert M. Gary" wrote: The TFR is for the 5 minutes it takes for the climb out. 5 minutes to FL180? About 5,000 fpm I was told. Cruising at 60,000' requires a pretty healthy climb rate... |
#6
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... Oh, and yes, the plane is flown mostly by mouse, not yoke. -Robert ....and that is no yoke! |
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Blueskies wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 1, 3:19 pm, "Dan Luke" wrote: "Robert M. Gary" wrote: The TFR is for the 5 minutes it takes for the climb out. 5 minutes to FL180? About 5,000 fpm I was told. Cruising at 60,000' requires a pretty healthy climb rate... They only need to get to 18,000 to enter Class A in the US. After that they can back off the climb profile. Thats less than 4 minutes at 5k fpm. |
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They're referring to San Nicolas Island. The facilities are already
there... and have been for more than fifty years. In fact, a lot of the early Global Hawk flights were done there. -R.S.Hoover -(USN, Retired) |
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On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 22:33:15 -0700, Richard Riley
wrote in : Better to put them in the middle of Kansas than off shore. Better for whom? |
#10
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On Oct 1, 10:33 pm, Richard Riley wrote:
On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 15:02:44 -0400, john smith wrote: In article . com, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: The pilot also said that they are all very confused as to why the GH is based out of an area of such high air traffic. He said he thought the military was originally going to base them out of an island owned by the Navy off the cost of LA where there is really no GA traffic. Come on Robert, that is an easy answer.... politics! Well, Beal isn't exactly Los Alamitos. Sure, there's traffic there, but it's not that much. Basing them off shore would have been a LOT more expensive. There's no infrastructure there, it would all have to be built. There is a massive Navy base. -Robert |
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