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    15th Sustainment Brigade schools Soldiers on sling load

    15th Sustainment Brigade schools Soldiers on sling load

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Matthew Cooley | Spc. Robert Langdale, a 615th Aviation Support Battalion aircraft power plant...... read more read more

    FORT HOOD, TEXAS, UNITED STATES

    11.25.2008

    Story by Sgt. Matthew Cooley 

    15th Sustainment Brigade

    By Sgt. Matthew C. Cooley
    15th Sustainment Brigade Public Affairs

    FORT HOOD, Texas – "I hear a bird!"

    The group of Soldiers turned to face the sound's direction, shielding their eyes with their hands from the morning sun.

    They eagerly awaited the UH-60 Black Hawk's approach. This was the big moment they had all been waiting for.

    15th Sustainment Brigade concluded a week long Sling Load Certification Course for 53 Soldiers from various units and posts with a live sling load exercise at Hammer Landing Zone, Nov. 21.

    Soldiers from different units of 1st Cavalry Division, 13th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary), and Fort Polk, La., learned how to hook sling load packages like Humvees, fuel containers, and filled cargo nets to the bottom of helicopters for quick and easy transport.

    "It's a class I've always wanted to be in," Spc. Brandon Treaster, a Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Joint Readiness Training Center parachute rigger from Fort Polk said.

    Treaster said many Soldiers ask riggers if they can do certain tasks which they may not know how to do.

    "... but I know how to sling load a Humvee," he said.

    Three Soldiers made the six hour drive from Polk to attend the class.

    The 40 hour class was primarily instructed by a five member mobile training team from Fort Lee, Va. which travels the world to certify service members in sling loading as well as instructs at Fort Lee.

    The team's four civilians all had prior Army experience or were retired Army, and were led by one non-commissioned officer.

    "I just wanted to come back, train Soldiers, be with Soldiers. I kind of missed it," David Hughes, a sling load instructor-writer on the MTT and retired Army parachute rigger said.

    This was the sling load MMT's third class at Hood this year, all organized by 15th Sustainment Brigade.

    Soldiers in attendance were trained in sling load inspection and rigging, criteria for designating a landing zone, landing zone setup, and the weight different helicopters can handle, Hughes said.
    "Just about anything in the Army inventory can be sling loaded," Hughes explained.

    Only Soldiers who took the Sling Load Certification Course, Pathfinder, or Air Assault schools are qualified to inspect and prepare loads.

    Many of the Soldiers were excited by the experience.

    Each of the Soldiers took turns on a cold Friday morning standing in the back of a Humvee, bracing themselves as the low flying Black Hawk's rotor wash buffeted against their bodies and the vehicle. With the help of an MTT instructor, they attached a looped rigging from the Humvee to a hook on the bottom of the aircraft and then quickly moved to safety.

    "It was a big adrenaline rush with that big helicopter right above you," Spc. Alex Christ, helicopter hydraulic mechanic, 615th Aviation Support Battalion, 1st Air Cavalry Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division said.

    "I hope it fired you up a little bit," Col. Larry Phelps, 15th SB commander told the class at their graduation.

    Phelps also praised the MTT for their excellent safety record.

    15th SB regularly schedules SLCC classes and Soldiers from any unit are invited. To attend the course, a Soldier must be grade E4 or above.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.25.2008
    Date Posted: 11.25.2008 14:51
    Story ID: 26794
    Location: FORT HOOD, TEXAS, US

    Web Views: 149
    Downloads: 111

    PUBLIC DOMAIN