Redlands18
Well-Known Member
Doubtful, they are all less than 10yo. The last 4 have only been delivered in the last year.Interesting that the Budget papers only state 10 with no explanatory note. Is it possible four were retired?
Doubtful, they are all less than 10yo. The last 4 have only been delivered in the last year.Interesting that the Budget papers only state 10 with no explanatory note. Is it possible four were retired?
It’s been common knowledge for years the Army has 14 x CH-47F.Interesting that the Budget papers only state 10 with no explanatory note. Is it possible four were retired?
I suppose it is yet another way that the Government gets to skimp on defence. Now Marles doesn’t have to worry about those pesky flight hours.Now that is a good question that leaves us with 3 blackhawks and 10 chinooks? Not an ideal situation. Can our existing order be sped up? Unlikely. Lets hope we don't have a pressing need for rotary air in the next 12-18 months or its going to look rather embarassing.
My only surprise is how anyone could be surprised about the results we are seeing now.Albanese and Marles talked a big game in defence, but all we have seen so far are massive cuts to capability and force depth.
You'd rather put crews at risk?I suppose it is yet another way that the Government gets to skimp on defence. Now Marles doesn’t have to worry about those pesky flight hours.
The DSR. Demoralising Strategic Reductions.My only surprise is how anyone could be surprised about the results we are seeing now.
Blind Freddy could see this coming a mile off.
You get the Government you vote for and deserve.
Fortunately I didn’t vote for them.
No but I would get my crews seconded to US army aviation units so that they keep up their currency. Maybe try and accelerate the blackhawk purchases. All of this would cost money though which the Government is clearly not willing to provide to Army.You'd rather put crews at risk?
This has happened before, tiger was grounded after the German loss in Africa, crews maintained currency, at great expense, flying other (civil) types around the country.
There’s obviously a limit on how many crews you can push through the US army blackhawk conversion training pipeline but it would make sense to ramp this up as soon as possible.I’m not sure you would need continuity training specifically on a NH-90, if they’re no longer going to be operational.
thinking rotary flying training could continue on contracted aircraft, and perhaps start more senior operational crews on Blackhawk conversions early?
Yep, that's what they did with the Tiger grounding. Crews went around the country and trained on commercial helicopters.I’m not sure you would need continuity training specifically on a NH-90, if they’re no longer going to be operational.
thinking rotary flying training could continue on contracted aircraft, and perhaps start more senior operational crews on Blackhawk conversions early?
I agree, Governments don’t want to put aircrews at risk, unnecessary risk.You'd rather put crews at risk?
This has happened before, tiger was grounded after the German loss in Africa, crews maintained currency, at great expense, flying other (civil) types around the country.
The type was scheduled for early replacement after a succession of maintenance issues. It's not just that an aircraft was lost, it's that it was lost after years of effort on improving reliability and availability.I agree, Governments don’t want to put aircrews at risk, unnecessary risk.
But let’s be realistic, the loss of the MRH-90 back in July is not the first (or will it be the last) ADF aviation asset to be lost.
Most groundings can last as little as a few weeks, or a few months (max).
Has the global MRH/NH-90 fleet been grounded? In very recent times the US has lost F-35 and F/A-18 Super Hornets, did we see the RAAF ground their respective fleets? No?
This Government has taken the soft option.
It's a fair questionThe big question is what is the ADF going to do for army rotary wing tactical airlift until a suitable number of the Blackhawk Ms arrive? They can't exactly magic up 50 odd helos with the snap of fingers.
It is hard to tell at the moment.A lot to like and many levels.
Just ARA.Are you asking Army wide or just ARA?
Leave aside 2RAR.Just ARA.
Nominally under Beersheba there were 28 manoeuvre elements (inc. 2 RAR).
From your post I assume this is now 25.
Given 28 manoeuvre elements was pretty light already (e.g from Takao's example, that a mechanised brigade under current doctrine requires a minimum of 15 manoeuvre elements for instance) this is quite concerning.
Regards,
Massive
Yes - it does. Sadly.Leave aside 2RAR.
If correct are we now down to 21 manoeuvre groups?
Does this look correct?
Cheers S