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thedrifter
01-19-03, 08:06 AM
By Mark Oliva, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Sunday, January 19, 2003


KADENA AIR BASE, Okinawa — Marine Lt. Col. Rob Kuckuk knows a thing or two about flying. He’s been doing it for more than 13 years. He’s landed on airfields all over the world and on ships at sea.

And he’s done it in a jet that some think is one of the most unsafe airframes in the Defense Department.

Kuckuk flies the Marines’ AV-8B II Plus Harrier — the plane that can take off and land vertically.

It’s also the plane about which the House Armed Services Committee chairman, Rep. Duncan Hunter, has promised “robust hearings.”

But ask Kuckuk and he’ll tell you there’s nothing dangerous about his jet.

“I don’t think Harriers are more difficult to fly than any other airplane,” Kuckuk said. “It’s true: It requires constant attention. The take-off and landing phase is much more difficult than any other aircraft. Other than that, it’s just another jet.”

But it’s a jet that’s been under attack by critics since it debuted in 1983. Its role is different from that of any other aircraft: Harriers deploy on amphibious assault ships and provide ground attack and close-air support for battlefield Marines. Critics blast the Harrier because it’s not supersonic, it’s not stealthy and it has limited range. But Kuckuk said those arguments are unfounded.

“There’s nothing stealthy about the F-15s or Hornets either,” he said, “but we’re not going to fly into downtown Baghdad. The Marine Corps’ mission is different than that of the Navy and Air Force.

“We spend our money on aircraft to protect our ground troops,” he added. “B-52s don’t drop danger-close when troops are engaged.”

But Harriers also are similar to other jets, such as the F/A-18 Hornet. Both jets are strike fighters. Both fly bombing missions. Both can conduct air-to-air, armed reconnaissance.

“Both have basically the same mission,” Kuckuk said. “They’re a better fighter, and we’re a better bomber. But they can’t take off and land on an amphibious assault ship. We can take off and land anywhere.”

Kuckuk points out that his squadron, Marine Attack Squadron 214 — the Black Sheep Squadron — lacks the “F” or fighter designation.

The idea behind the Harrier is to have aircraft on call for ground forces. During the ground phase of the 1991 Persian Gulf War, Harriers operated from forward bases 40 miles from Kuwait’s border, much closer than other allied jets. Eighty-six Harriers flew 3,380 sorties. Turnaround time for refueling and rearming averaged only 23 minutes.

Kuckuk rebuffed criticisms of the Harrier that it flies too slowly for the modern battlefield or consumes too much fuel.

“It goes too slow for what?” he asked. “Find me an F-15 guy who drops his weapons while supersonic. I can run a Hornet out of gas every time. It’s simply untrue to say we don’t have the legs.”

The Harrier’s limitations are not of the basic design, but of leaps in technology.

“We can’t drop Joint Direct Attack Munitions,” he said. “But that’s because we don’t have the special wiring in the wing. Other aircraft got it installed. We didn’t, but we’re getting it.”

Harriers also have been upgraded with Lightning II targeting pods, allowing them to drop laser-guided bombs. It was the lack of this capability that kept Harriers out of the air war over Bosnia.

“Other platforms had that five or six years before we did,” Kuckuk said.

Critics say 42 Marines have been killed in Harrier crashes since the AV-8B arrived in the Corps. They say the vertical/short take-off tactics have the Harrier flying on one engine, while every other naval jet flies on two. But Kuckuk said that criticism, too, is inaccurate. While Harriers suffered three crashes in 2002, six Hornets have crashed since last October 2002, Kuckuk said.

“The engine itself is relatively failure-free until we do something to cause it to malfunction. The fact is, this is a dangerous business,” he said. “Sometimes people die doing this. Sometimes people die going to work, or flying Hornets or F-16s.”

Kuckuk said mishaps are measured in the number that happen per 100,000 flight hours. But Harriers fly many short missions — lasting an hour to 1½ hours, meaning Harriers log more flight missions with shorter hours than do other aircraft. Other aircraft might fly longer missions — four or five hours — meaning they’ll fly fewer missions for the same amount of hours.

“I’d say it’s the safest aircraft in the military,” said Capt. Andy Husman, who started flying the Harrier in October 2000. “If there’s standing water in the runway, we can do vertical landing. There are more options. Maybe it is harder to fly, but that’s why they have a higher cut in flight school.”

Kuckuk doesn’t deny the Harrier has had its share of problems. The Harrier was grounded for a year in July 2000 after a faulty engine bearing was cited as the cause of a crash. That led to a whirlwind of changes, including more frequent short-range groundings.

Marines embraced operational-risk management, a system championed by the Air Force to recognize and solve problems. Simulators were improved and pilot training standards were raised.

“We monitor the health of our engines better than any community in any service,” Kuckuk said. “There was one instance where we found a problem on one of our jets and grounded the entire fleet to look for the same problem. We found it on one other plane. What’s wrong with that? I think it’s better we found it and fixed it before we had another jet crash.”

Capt. Michael Murphy, one of the Black Sheep’s newer fliers, pointed to the unique role the Harrier fills while deployed with Marines on ship. While Hornets deploy on aircraft carriers, Harriers are on the same ship as the infantry.

“You see their faces,” he said. “They’re the ones you’re supporting, and you get to know them. It’s more of a team concept. If I was a Marine on the ground, I’d rather have the Harrier flying over me than a bomber flying at 30,000 feet.”

In the future, short take off and vertical landing planes likely still will be a large part of Marine aviation. The Joint Strike Fighter for the Marine Corps is being designed to take off and land just like today’s Harrier.


AV-8B Harrier II info


Primary function: Attack and destroy surface targets under day and night visual conditions.

Manufacturer: McDonnell Douglas

Propulsion: One Rolls Royce F402-RR-406 or F402-RR-408 turbofan engine

Thrust: F402-RR-406: 21,500 pounds. F402-44-208: 23,400 pounds

Length: 46.3 feet (14.11 meters)

Wing span: 30.3 feet (9.24 meters)

Cruise speed: Subsonic to transonic

Ferry range: 2,100 nautical miles (2416.64 miles)

Combat radius:

• close air support: 163 nautical miles (187.45 miles) with 30 minutes’ time on station

• interdiction: 454 nautical miles (522.45 miles)

Armament: Seven external store stations, comprising six wing stations for AIM-9 Sidewinder and an assortment of air-to-ground weapons, external fuel tanks and AGM-65 Maverick missiles; one centerline station for DECM pod or air-to-ground ordnance. A GAU-12 25 mm six-barrel gun pod can be mounted on the centerline and has a 300 round capacity with a lead computing optical sight system (LCOSS) gunsight.

Crew: 1

Introduction date: 12 January 1985, AV-8B II (Plus) introduced in June 1993

Unit replacement cost: $23,700,000

Mission: The mission of the VMA STOVL squadron is to attack and destroy surface and air targets, to escort helicopters, and to conduct other such air operations as may be directed. Specific tasks of the AV-8B Harrier II include:

• Conduct close air support using conventional and specific weapons.

• Conduct deep air support, to include armed reconnaissance and air interdiction, using conventional and specific weapons.

• Conduct offensive and defensive anti-air warfare. This includes combat air patrol, armed escort missions, and offensive missions against enemy ground-to-air defenses, all within the capabilities of the aircraft.

• Be able to operate and deliver ordnance at night and to operate under instrument flight conditions.

• Be able to deploy for extended operations employing aerial refueling.

• Be able to deploy to and operate from carriers and other suitable seagoing platforms, advanced bases, expeditionary airfields and remote tactical landing sites.

Features: The AV-8B V/STOL strike aircraft was designed to replace the AV-8A and the A-4M light attack aircraft. The Marine Corps requirement for a V/STOL light attack force has been well documented since the late 1950's. Combining tactical mobility, responsiveness, reduced operating cost and basing flexibility, both afloat and ashore, V/STOL aircraft are particularly well-suited to the special combat and expeditionary requirements of the Marine Corps. The AV-8BII+ features the APG-65 Radar common to the F/A-18, as well as all previous systems and features common to the AV-8BII.

Inventory: 7 squadrons with 20 aircraft each and 1 training squadron with 20 AV-8B and 15 TAV-8B aircraft for a total 175 aircraft.

Source: Marine Corps Fact File

http://www.estripes.com/photos/12585_118145437b.jpg
Mark Oliva / S&S
Marine Lt. Col. Rob Kuckuk of Marine Attack Squadron 214, the Black Sheep Squadron, stands before an AV-8B Harrier at Kadena Air Base


http://www.estripes.com/photos/12585_118145635b.jpg
Mark Oliva / S&S
Marine Capt. Michael Murphy of Marine Attack Squadron 214, the Black Sheep Squadron, stands before an AV-8B Harrier at Kadena Air Base


Sempers,

Roger

yellowwing
01-19-03, 09:52 AM
In '84 we shared office space with VMA 211 (Wake Island Defenders) maintenance. They had a few old A-4's flying that still had patches from NVA sharpnel!

Barndog
01-19-03, 10:21 AM
One better.....

When I got (the Green Weenie) and went from HML-267, to VMA(aw)-224 (A-6E's at Cherry Point) I saw the 'old Harriers' at the training squadron, rite next to our hangar there, at The Pit.

I remember like yesterday, the pilot that flew upside down, with one nozzle inverted. His equilibrium was AFU so bad, he flew thru the hangar, and pulled the handle.

Saw plenty of A-4's like that in my day. Plenty of 'rockets with wings' - the kick-ass F-4. That my young Bro's, was an aircraft.
If you ain't never stood near the flight line, when one of those mutha's had both afterburners lit, takin off with a full compliment or ordinance.......

You aint lived. Rite Bones?, Roger, Joe, JR, LOL Hawk, etc etc etc....... LOLOL If I forgot anyone, my bust.