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#11
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Navy Wings?
vincent p. norris wrote: This gets more bewildering by the minute. What do Parachutist wings have to do with being a Naval Aviator? Probably nothing, but the original poster was asking about something he saw in an news bite that looked a little odd. If one were to take a look at the photos posted of all those USMC BGs you can see who is qualified as what. Just out of curiosity I did so and saw no unusual wings or devices, and none with stars attached to or above their qualification device. Of 52 BGs, 15 are Naval Aviators. Two Naval Aviators are also wear wings Naval Parachutists and two others for Basic Parachutists. Two of the 52 are Naval Flight Officers. Eight are Naval Parachutists (making a total of 10 so qualified) and four of them are also Scuba Divers. Another five are Basic Parachutists (making a total of 7 so qualified). The remaining 22 do not display wings of any kind nor diver's helmet badges. Rich |
#12
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Navy Wings?
These were GOLD wings, not Silver!
"Mike Kanze" wrote in message . .. During the Vietnam era a number of USMC flight students went through the USAF pilot training pipeline as an expediency. Thus it would not be surprising to hear of a serving General officer still sporting Wings of Lead, especially if his later flying career (C-130s, for example) never took him in the vicinity of El Boat or required him to carqual. If they were gold, the "star" may in fact have been a deployed parachute, i.e., Naval Parachutist. -- Mike Kanze "There's a fine line between evil and underpaid." - Carol The Secretary, Dilbert (1/14/2007) "nmg175" wrote in message . .. Saw a B/G Marine with what appeared to be Navy Pilot Wings on his tunic on C-SPAN. But these were different, they had a Star in the middle, looked very similar to the U.S. Air Force Senior Pilot wings. Have they gone to this approach, with Command Pilot also? Or where these some sort of other Aeronautical Speciality? |
#13
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Navy Wings?
On Thu, 18 Jan 2007 22:22:12 -0500, vincent p. norris
wrote: During the Vietnam era a number of USMC flight students went through the USAF pilot training pipeline as an expediency. Migawd!!! I never heard that!!! I was a Marine-no-longer-on-active-duty by that time, but nevertheless it's hard to believe. Can you supply details? vince norris That would have been around 1968-70. At that time the requirements for Naval Aviators exceeded what Pensacola could produce. For comparison it should be noted that USAF pilot training went up from eight to ten bases dedicated to the mission. Although the USAF didn't have truly "excess" capability, they could absorb a bit of the load for the Navy. We took one USMC student per class (8 classes per year) per base (10 bases). The Marines went through the full and complete USAF UPT syllabus (T-41/T-37/T-38) and upon graduation were awarded USAF pilot wings. They then went to Pensacola for USN completion training which included CARQUAL. As far as I know, they were all fast jet tracked. Upon completion of that abbreviated program they were awarded USN gold wings and assigned to their operational training. I was a UPT instructor during the period at Williams AFB in AZ. Since then I've crossed paths with several of the students and swapped TINS stories. As a follow-on, at the wind-down of the war, requirements were drastically reduced (late 1970) and while USAF chose to cut the training pipeline at the acquisition point--reduce recruiting for pilot slots, the Navy opted to cut immediately across the board. On one Black Friday they went into Pensacola and cut more than 400 students in training. Several were within weeks of graduation. A number of these Navy pilot candidates were given the opportunity for inter-service transfers and were picked up by the USAF where they completed UPT. (At that time I was on the MAJCOM staff at Air Training Command managing UPT/UNT/UHT and Survival courses). Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
#14
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Navy Wings?
On Fri, 19 Jan 2007 16:34:22 GMT, Ed Rasimus
wrote: snipped for brevity As a follow-on, at the wind-down of the war, requirements were drastically reduced (late 1970) and while USAF chose to cut the training pipeline at the acquisition point--reduce recruiting for pilot slots, the Navy opted to cut immediately across the board. On one Black Friday they went into Pensacola and cut more than 400 students in training. Several were within weeks of graduation. I remember this. I was in Pensacola with a CQ det from VS-30 (the S-2 RAG) the next week. I had a cousin about to graduate from AOC and he got RIFed. He told me that they just went in and cut the bottom 50% of each class. He was awaiting his discharge. You could pick up REAL good deals on "muscle cars" as the BOQ parking lot looked like a used car lot for all the "for sale" signs. Navy personnel management practices are not always "top drawer." :-( Bill Kambic Haras Lucero, Kingston, TN Mangalarga Marchador: Uma Raça, Uma Paixão |
#15
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Navy Wings?
one Black Friday they went into Pensacola and cut more than 400 students in training.
I remember this too. I had just finished BJN School at NAS Glynco, after having been offered a switch from RIO School (I was 3 weeks into the RIO pipeline) because "the Navy desperately needed A-6 B/Ns." You can guess the rest. No one in our BJN class got any A-6 RAG orders, and there were no impending inputs into the A-3 or RA-5C RAGs (the two other outlets at that time for BJN grads). My entire class was SERGRADed. I felt sorry for myself, but not for long once the word got out about the Big Attrite. At least I had wings, a DIFOT billet at VT-7 / NAS Meridian, and a deferred shot at the bird (A-6) and coast (west) of my choice. It all worked out OK, except my 18 months at NMM were the longest 3 years of my life. -- Mike Kanze "There's a fine line between evil and underpaid." - Carol The Secretary, Dilbert (1/14/2007) wrote in message ... On Fri, 19 Jan 2007 16:34:22 GMT, Ed Rasimus wrote: snipped for brevity As a follow-on, at the wind-down of the war, requirements were drastically reduced (late 1970) and while USAF chose to cut the training pipeline at the acquisition point--reduce recruiting for pilot slots, the Navy opted to cut immediately across the board. On one Black Friday they went into Pensacola and cut more than 400 students in training. Several were within weeks of graduation. I remember this. I was in Pensacola with a CQ det from VS-30 (the S-2 RAG) the next week. I had a cousin about to graduate from AOC and he got RIFed. He told me that they just went in and cut the bottom 50% of each class. He was awaiting his discharge. You could pick up REAL good deals on "muscle cars" as the BOQ parking lot looked like a used car lot for all the "for sale" signs. Navy personnel management practices are not always "top drawer." :-( Bill Kambic Haras Lucero, Kingston, TN Mangalarga Marchador: Uma Raça, Uma Paixão |
#16
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Navy Wings?
On Thu, 18 Jan 2007 22:25:51 -0500, vincent p. norris
wrote: The got gold wings wihout CQing? Absolutely! Anyone who completes the Naval Aviation Training Command syllabus for their pipeline gets gold wings, regardless of whether they carrier qualified or not. The best example is the prop pipline which ceased CARQUALing all SNA's in the mid-70's. Only those with orders to the E-2/C-2 go through the CARQUAL syllabus. The better answer for the original post is that it is probaby astronaut wings. I believe there is one USMC flag office that was on a shuttle team. Don't recall who or whether they were pilot or mission specialist. USN Astronaut wings are gold and the center device could look like a star with the right lighting and camera angle. John Alger USN(ret) 1972-1997 // 1310,1320 TA-4J, A-7E, EC-130Q, P-3B |
#17
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Navy Wings?
vincent p. norris wrote:
This gets more bewildering by the minute. What do Parachutist wings have to do with being a Naval Aviator? Gold Navy Parachutist wings look similar to Aviator wings, to the average non-military person. An enlisted Marine may well be a qualified parachutist. An unscrupulous one may try to pass them off as Aviator wings... |
#18
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Navy Wings?
The best example is the prop pipline which ceased CARQUALing all SNA's in the mid-70's.
Not to mention USCG fixed-wing aviators, who all wear Wings of Gold and who (to my best knowledge) have never been required to hit the boat. -- Mike Kanze "There's a fine line between evil and underpaid." - Carol The Secretary, Dilbert (1/14/2007) "John" wrote in message ... On Thu, 18 Jan 2007 22:25:51 -0500, vincent p. norris wrote: The got gold wings wihout CQing? Absolutely! Anyone who completes the Naval Aviation Training Command syllabus for their pipeline gets gold wings, regardless of whether they carrier qualified or not. The best example is the prop pipline which ceased CARQUALing all SNA's in the mid-70's. Only those with orders to the E-2/C-2 go through the CARQUAL syllabus. The better answer for the original post is that it is probaby astronaut wings. I believe there is one USMC flag office that was on a shuttle team. Don't recall who or whether they were pilot or mission specialist. USN Astronaut wings are gold and the center device could look like a star with the right lighting and camera angle. John Alger USN(ret) 1972-1997 // 1310,1320 TA-4J, A-7E, EC-130Q, P-3B |
#19
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Navy Wings?
Thanks for all the informative replies.
vince norris |
#20
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Navy Wings?
On 2007-01-19 08:34:22 -0800, Ed Rasimus said:
[...] Although the USAF didn't have truly "excess" capability, they could absorb a bit of the load for the Navy. We took one USMC student per class (8 classes per year) per base (10 bases). The Marines went through the full and complete USAF UPT syllabus (T-41/T-37/T-38) and upon graduation were awarded USAF pilot wings. [...] A number of these Navy pilot candidates were given the opportunity for inter-service transfers and were picked up by the USAF where they completed UPT. Given the numbers you say the Navy cut, at least some of the pilots given the chop must have been Marine sticks, right Ed? Which means, presumably, that before UPT they would have gotten at least a good dose of the "Every Marine is a rifleman!" USMC ethos in Corps OCS, if not four years of it in NROTC. Must have been an interesting for these guys to find themselves abruptly in the Air Force. I'm imagining a freshly-winged butter bar in USAF dress blues except with a high 'n tight, blood stripe on the trousers and a boarding sabre on his hip. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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