Formations Flashcards

1
Q

Formation Lead

A
  1. Performing smooth/consistent, stable, and predictable changes in power, heading, and
    altitude.
  2. Keep the flight within the proper operating area and comply with local course rules.
  3. Keep the flight clear of clouds (unless on an IFR clearance) and other aircraft.
  4. Always know where Wing is.
  5. Execute the briefed formation sequence utilizing proper visual and radio communications.
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2
Q

Wingman

A
  1. Keep Lead in sight and maintain flight path deconfliction.
  2. Maintain proper position.
  3. Comply with Lead’s signals and give timely response.
  4. Provide mutual support: Be prepared to assume the lead at any time – back up lead with navigation, communication, etc.
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3
Q

Lead pursuit

A

used to decrease nose to tail separation

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4
Q

Pure pursuit

A

achieved by putting wing’s nose on lead’s aircraft

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5
Q

Lag pursuit

A

used to maintain or increase nose to tail separation

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6
Q

Underrun when lead is wings level

A

Lower, idle, lateral

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7
Q

Underrun when lead is in a turn

A

Lower, level, idle (extend speed brake if required), pass below and behind

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8
Q

Parade Position

A

45* bearing line left/right side of the Lead
aircraft with proper step-down and wingtip separation.

A: Lead’s inboard exhaust stack is fully visible and touching the bottom (tangent) wing

B: placing the lower UHF antenna over the inboard aileron cutout on the opposite wing

C: Leads pitot tube on the prop arc

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9
Q

Parade Turns (Away)

A

A: underside of Lead’s fuselage on the horizon

B: lower UHF antenna in line vertically with the inboard (opposite wing) aileron cutout

C: Lead’s CFS door tangent to the trailing edge of the wing

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10
Q

Parade Turns (Into)

A

Lead’s angle of bank, lower the nose slightly while reducing power, matching Lead’s roll rate, and maintaining the same parade check points.

Once established, Wing will maintain the same parade references as straight and level flight.

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11
Q

Crossunder

A

Simultaneously adjust power and pitch to begin drifting aft while slightly increasing step-down

The step-down checkpoint continues to be:
A) exhaust stack tangent to the leading edge of the wing.

B) Proper nose-to-tail separation has been achieved when the UHF antenna is over the dihedral bend of the wing

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12
Q

Cruise Position

A

60º bearing line. 20’ of step-down, and 3-6 plane widths between aircraft

A: keeping the exhaust stack below and tangent to the leading edge of the wing

B: keeping the forward tip of the ventral fin over the inboard aileron cutout on the opposite wing

C/S: edge of the prop arc on the pitot tube

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13
Q

Lead Change Procedure

A
  1. The new Wing will increase wingtip clearance to approximately 20’ by using a slight wing dip away from the new Lead.
  2. Wing will retard the PCL slightly and descend to obtain proper step-down prior to beginning aft movement relative to Lead. Proper step-down is established when Lead’s pitot tube is in line with the Orange and White paint line on Lead’s aircraft.
  3. Once step-down is established, Wing will use power to slide aft towards the parade bearing
    line while maintaining step-down. Once on the bearing line, establish the parade scan and make
    power and attitude adjustments to maintain the proper ABCs.
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14
Q

CCAS (For Recovey)

A

Cruise, Checklist (OPS/Descent), ATIS, Speeds

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15
Q

Perch Position

A

defined as a position slightly stepped-up, between the 30-60° bearing lines, with 500’ of separation

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