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    Flight engineer plays vital role in medevac missions in Afghanistan

    Flight engineer plays vital role in medevac missions in Afghanistan

    Photo By Master Sgt. Beth Del Vecchio | Master Sgt. Rogelio Martinez, 76th Expeditionary Rescue Squadron flight engineer,...... read more read more

    CAMP BASTION, AFGHANISTAN

    02.02.2012

    Story by Tech. Sgt. Beth Del Vecchio 

    United States Air Forces Central           

    CAMP BASTION, Afghanistan - The job description of an Air Force flight engineer reads like several specialty codes in one.

    As part of the aircrew on an HC-130P King, Master Sgt. Rogelio Martinez, 76th Expeditionary Rescue Squadron flight engineer, takes a vital role in the only fixed-wing medical evacuation missions flown for Operation Enduring Freedom.

    Just a few of Martinez's responsibilities include performing aircraft preflight, in-flight and post-flight inspections, maintaining all aircraft checklists during flight, monitoring engine instruments and aircraft systems through operation, computing and applying aircraft weight, balance, and performance data, determining engine fuel consumption using airspeed, atmospheric data, charts, computers, or electronic calculators, reporting abnormal conditions to the pilot and recommending corrective actions.

    "I worry about the operability of aviation systems, so the pilots can concentrate on flying," Martinez said. "The aircraft weight is always changing; field elevations, runway conditions and weather changes. I have to make calculations based on these conditions to determine the aircraft's flight performance."

    In short, the flight engineer has to be familiar with every piece, system and operation of the aircraft.

    "The flight engineer is our systems expert," said Lt. Col. Peter Dominicis, 76th ERQS commander. "He knows more about the aircraft than most pilots ever will."

    Martinez sits behind, but right between, the pilots on the flight deck. Dominicis said Martinez acts as an objective eye and adds an extra safety element to the flight.

    "Pilots learn that if something starts to go wrong, they need to sort of de-automate, step back from technology and fly the plane," he said. "Having an engineer allows us to do that - to fly the airplane."

    Missions flown by the 76th ERQS can be dynamic. The HC-130s assigned are equipped with an air-to-land command and control system, which allows the crew to communicate in real-time with their operations center. This gives them the option to retask a mission while still in the air, reducing response time. Martinez has to be ready for anything each time they take off on a mission.

    "If I was landing at a major hub with 11,000 feet of runway, I could just get my checklist with all the calculations on it already," Dominicis said. "But when you have a 3,000-foot landing strip up at 9,000 feet elevation, it's made of dirt and maybe you have snow there ... that's when you need the guy with the book on his lap using a pencil and a calculator with the charts to see if we can land at our current gross weight. That's when the performance of the aircraft becomes critical."

    The position of flight engineer was removed from the flight crew of HC-130J models, but for Dominicis, the human element can't be replaced by technology, especially during flying operations with the ERQS.

    "I think if you're just taking off and cruising at a high altitude from point A to point B, a two-pilot flight deck is adequate," he said. "But any time you get a mission that's dynamic like ours where you're going from point A to point B and then next thing you know, you're headed to point G out of nowhere, if you don't have the undivided attention of your pilots to fly in the terrain, airspeed and following the course, you lose some of the safety aspects of a multiperson crew."

    According to Martinez, flying medevac missions in Afghanistan is a bit different than the personnel recovery-focused training missions he flies at Moody Air Force Base, Ga.

    "You know, picking up a patient and knowing they are in really bad shape keeps you alert and raises the stakes a bit," he said. "Once you get on the ground, it's a great feeling that we completed the mission and the patient is going to be all right."

    He says being deployed gives him a new perspective on his job.

    "As a flight engineer, you get the feeling of bringing something to the fight each time you fly," he said.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.02.2012
    Date Posted: 02.03.2012 04:22
    Story ID: 83275
    Location: CAMP BASTION, AF

    Web Views: 129
    Downloads: 0

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