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Articles for category Training




Mar
21
2016

Meet A Rotorcraft Pro - Alex Anduze

Posted by Admin

What is your current position? I am the vice president of flight operations at Firehawk Helicopters, Inc. At Firehawk we operate four Sikorsky S-70 commercial Black Hawks and four BHI H60 Hawks (former Army UH-60s) and four Airbus Helicopters AS-350B3s. The aircraft are used for aerial firefighting, research and development flight testing, construction and external lift, and television and film productions. Previously I spent 17 years at Sikorsky Aircraft. The first nine years I was a test engineer and the last eight years I was a test pilot. Concurrent with my time at Sikorsky I was also in the US Army Reserves where I flew UH-60s for a decade. [Read More...]



Categories: categoryHuman Interest categoryCareer Development categoryTraining



Mar
14
2016

Risk Resource Management—The Not-so-New CRM

Posted by Admin

I’m going to give you a simple mental tool to keep you safe: Risk Resource Management (RRM). It’s a tool Chesley Sullenberger used for 14 years before he famously landed his Airbus A320 in the Hudson River. It’s also a tool he instructed his students to use when he taught crew resource management at US Airways. It’s a tool you can use in your helicopter to make better decisions, whether you’re flying single-pilot or multicrew. [Read More...]



Categories: categoryTraining categorySafety



Jan
11
2016

Fundamentals of Learning…What’s that?

Posted by Admin

Over the years, I have developed a few instructional techniques that I use when teaching students. One such technique has proven beneficial time after time, and begins at the first meeting with the student. Once a student is assigned to me, I’ll reach out to them to introduce myself, and schedule their first ground school session. I request they bring their spouse or significant other, and let them know that this first ground school session is on me…as in FREE! [Read More...]



Categories: categoryTraining categoryCareer Development



Dec
14
2015

The 61.75 Foreign Pilot Verification Process - Verify, Verify, Verify!

Posted by Admin

To provide a path for a pilot holding a pilot certificate from another country to operate a U.S. registered aircraft, the FAA publishes Federal Aviation Regulation (FAR) 61.75. Within this FAR, a pilot can apply for and be issued a private pilot (PPL) certificate from the FAA, based upon their foreign pilot certificate. To receive this certification, no additional testing is required as long as the foreign pilot certificate is valid and the applicant meets minimum English speaking requirements of ICAO Level 4 proficiency. [Read More...]



Categories: categoryTraining



Nov
16
2015

AYITI (HAITI) AIR AMBULANCE Americans and Haitians Blend to Mend

Posted by Admin

HAITI That simple, short two-syllable word immediately brings to mind another two-syllable word—EARTHQUAKE. However, the ramifications and repercussions from that tragic event were not short and simple. Even today, more than five years after the 7.0 MW catastrophic quake ruptured rocks—and lives— the reverberations continue. Yet, it would be another tragedy to still see Haiti through the images of misery and mayhem that flooded the news media those years ago. For out of that rubble and ruin, forces arose more powerful than past casualties and chaos. Those forces: restored lives and hope. Yes, Haiti is still the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere with many problems to solve. However, its proud people are anything but poor in spirit. They are determined to climb to new heights—in new ways. One new way they are reaching those heights is through Ayiti Air Anbilans (Haiti Air Ambulance), a nonprofit organization that arose out of the 2010 rubble. In North America helicopter air ambulance is often taken for granted. In Haiti on the island of Hispaniola, it is seen as something to fight for and cherish. [Read More...]

Ayiti_AirAnbilans_0_OPENINGSPREAD.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_1.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_2.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_3.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_4.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_5.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_6.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_7.jpg  Ayiti_AirAnbilans_8.jpg 

Categories: categoryTraining categoryHelicopter Sectors categoryCompany Profiles



Nov
09
2015

Meet a Rotorcraft Pro - Jerry Daniels

Posted by Admin

RP: How did you get your start in helicopters? After returning from Desert Storm, I started taking flight lessons in an R22 and chose a career in law enforcement. I continued serving in the Kansas Army National Guard as a crew chief on Hueys and Blackhawks. In law enforcement, I was a state trooper in the Kansas Highway Patrol, and was eventually selected for a pilot-in-command position in the patrol’s Special Operations Air Unit. That’s how I got my break flying missions every day in helicopters and airplanes. It was just after 9/11 and there were so many security and surveillance flight missions. It was a great time to be a pilot in law enforcement who wanted to fly and build flight time. Best job I ever had! [Read More...]



Categories: categoryCareer Development categoryBecoming A Pilot categoryTraining categoryCompany Profiles categoryHuman Interest



Oct
26
2015

Military Flight Training Going Third Party

Posted by Admin

When it comes to training new helicopter pilots, the world’s military organizations are increasingly looking to third-party vendors for help. Choosing an outside organization, rather than doing training in-house, can help cash-strapped militaries exchange the cost of buying and maintaining their own training fleets for predictable fixed fees. Third-party contractors can also provide training in highly specialized areas that are just not cost-effective for militaries to provide for themselves. [Read More...]

MilitaryTraining_Agusta.jpg  MilitaryTraining_Airbus_EXPH-972-20_A4©A.PECCHI.jpg  MilitaryTraining_Bell_Navy.jpg  MilitaryTraining_BellHelicopter.jpg  MilitaryTraining_CAE_Rotorsim_.jpg  MilitaryTraining_hnz-topflight-bell-407.jpg  MilitaryTraining_MD_MG_9901.JPG 

Categories: categoryTraining categoryHelicopter Sectors



Oct
20
2015

PASSING THE BAR - Brim Aviation Transports Columbia River Bar Pilots

Posted by Admin

It’s known as The Graveyard of the Pacific and the infamous name fits. Since records have been kept, its treacherous waves, winds, fog, and currents have claimed more than 2,000 ships and 700 lives. It is where a river intent on disgorging its contents clashes with a massive ocean determined not to yield to the lesser water. A titanic fight ensues in never-ending combat: The river spews out water and sediments while the ocean lashes back, trying to invade the river with a fury that belies its tranquil name. It’s the Columbia River Bar, and it takes a special breed of not only boat pilots—but also helicopter pilots—to safely navigate through this natural war. [Read More...]

ColumbiaRiverBar_00_OPENER.jpg  ColumbiaRiverBar_02_HQ.jpg  ColumbiaRiverBar_03_Obstacles.jpg  ColumbiaRiverBar_04_bigboat.jpg  ColumbiaRiverBar_05_approach.jpg  ColumbiaRiverBar_06_Hoist3.jpg  ColumbiaRiverBar_07_Hoist1.jpg 

Categories: categoryCompany Profiles categoryTraining categorySafety categoryHelicopter Sectors



Oct
12
2015

“I’m an NVG Instructor”…Are you sure?

Posted by Admin

In October 2009, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) released new regulations related to the use of Night Vision Goggles (NVGs) in the US National Airspace System. Inclusive of these newly minted FARs was guidance on NVG pilot training and certification contained within FAR Part 61. Additionally, specific criteria was established to be an NVG Instructor. Although the regulation is clear as to the specific eligibility requirements to be an NVG Instructor, the guidance to provide an NVG instructor the required endorsement per FAR 61.195(k)(7) is non-existent. Since the release of these new regulations in 2009, FAA personnel have struggled to find unity among their colleagues on this issue. [Read More...]



Categories: categoryCareer Development categoryTraining categoryRegulatory



Oct
05
2015

But We’ve Always Done it This Way - My Two Cents

Posted by Admin

Has anyone ever said to you, “But we’ve always done it this way”? It’s a complacency trap that once held the potential for dire consequences for five of us employed as HEMS pilots for the king of Saudi Arabia. I was new to the organization, standing on the bridge of the king’s yacht with the chief pilot. We were both looking half a mile away through binoculars as he explained the approach to the hospital helipad. “You’ll fly to the waypoint listed “WALL” in the GPS, which is the wall at the edge of the palace grounds. Once you reach it, you’ll make a left 90-degree dogleg turn, keeping those five construction cranes on your right while staying well clear of that big unlit stadium on your left. See it?” [Read More...]



Categories: categoryTraining categorySafety categoryHuman Interest


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