Term
What are the two types of fuel transfer systems |
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Definition
Boom and Probe and Drogue |
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Term
Which system is more stable Boom or probe and drogue? Which one is only used by USAF? |
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Definition
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Term
Which refueling system transfers fuel faster? |
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Definition
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Term
KC-135's refueling configuration can be determined ____. What's its offload? How many are there? |
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Definition
on the ground only, can't be changed in flight; 90,000 lbs; 660 |
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Term
KC-10's refueling configuration can be determined _____. It can offload greater than _____. |
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Definition
In flight or on the ground; 250,000 for a four hour flight. |
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Term
The ____ is a US Navy dedicated carrier based tanker, used for emergency air refueling, offload ≈8,000lbs, “buddy store” system |
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Definition
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Term
The _____ can provide 19,000 lbs of offload but only when tanker remains close to the carrier. Total offload falls by _____ lbs for every hour the tanker remains airborne |
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Definition
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Term
The _____ is a USMC probe and drogue and can offload up to 46,000 lbs |
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Definition
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Term
The ____ is a spec-ops in flight refueler and refuels at low-levels |
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Definition
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Term
The ___ is the British refueler |
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Definition
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Term
The ____ is a ground track flown by the tanker, normally a left-hand racetrack |
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Definition
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Term
Anchor legs will normally have legs of approximately ____ in length |
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Definition
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Term
The _____ is the planned point to enter the refueling track |
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Definition
ARIP (Air refueling in initial point) |
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Term
The _____ is the planned geographic point over which receivers arrive in observation/pre-contact position w/ respect to assigned tanker |
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Definition
ARCP (air refueling control point) |
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Term
The _____ is the planned time that the receiver and tanker will arrive over the ARCP. |
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Definition
ARCT (Air Refueling control time) |
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Term
The ____ defines the ARCT. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A grouping of 2 or more (typically no more than three) tankers. |
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Term
The Lead tanker is called the ____. What altitude does he fly? Where can the other tankers be found in relation to the lead? |
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Definition
Base tanker, the refueling altitude; 1 NM in trail and 500' higher |
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Term
What is the required separation between tanker cells |
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Definition
2 or more cells in the same anchor/track= cells must be separated by 4000' minimum |
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Term
What is the required separation between the tankers and receivers? |
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Definition
Receivers must be 1000 below base tanker's altitude they are assigned to. |
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Term
Low altitude refueling is refueling below ____ AGL. Who conducts low-alt refueling? What are the requirements for low-alt refueling? |
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Definition
10,000 AGL; KC-130, Spec-ops; Lowest base alt is 3000AGL above highest terrain/obstacle w/n 4 NM of track; receivers won't descend below 1000 AGL;
Only done in daytime VMC conditions
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Term
An ____ is used for minimum receiver maneuvering. Tanker takes final turn. Used for larger aircraft, AC's without air to air radar or when time is critical |
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Definition
Point parallel (RV delta) |
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Term
A ___ is used for non-radar receivers. Provide them with vectors, used to join-up with minimum tanker maneuvering, used for multiple receivers simultaneously, stern geometry |
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Definition
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Term
The ABM's responsibilities during refueling are: |
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Definition
(1) Confirm receivers completed armament safety checks/nose cold (2) Ensure tanker & receivers use same altimeter (3) Refueling block altitudes & tanker IFF/SIF (4) Provide info upon check-in – heading, altitude block, rendezvous type, boom freq |
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Term
Tankers normally run their rendezvous at a speed of ____ and will use a ___ degree bank angle. |
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Definition
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Term
For a point parallel, turn the tanker when ____ NM of offset and ___NM of slant range have been accomplished. |
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Definition
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Term
The tankers responsibilities are: |
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Definition
1. Maintain overall control of the refueling operation and clearance 2. Fly orbits prescribed by AWO 3. Monitor radios |
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Term
The receiver's responsibilities are: |
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Definition
1. Listen to AWO 2. Remain on freq until cleared to boom freq 3. provide all initial info to AWO |
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Term
In the event an aircraft experiences an aircraft emergency, an ___ is the desired norm. |
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Definition
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Term
How do you accomplish an expedited rendezous? (both 150-30 and 90-90) |
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Definition
1. Vector nearest tanker & receiver toward each other 2.150-30: used for heavies or b/c of battle damage Slant range tanker: sim 19, live 26 Slant range receiver: sim 17, live 24
For 90-90, 1. Vector nearest tanker & receiver toward each other 2. No offset 3. At 15 NM, turn tanker, at 7NM turn receiver. |
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Term
What are the 4 emcon options? |
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Definition
i) EMCON 1 – any & all emitter authorized, used for training ii) EMCON 2 – Daily air-2-air refueling ops; radio silence except RV &AAR w/ limited radio exchange (tanker receiver confirm call sign, timing, FL, & weapons safe check) iii) EMCON3 – radio silent ops, use of other emitters authorized unless specifically prohibited iv) EMCON 4 – No emitters unless specifically authorized by plan (ATO, SPINS, ROE, etc) |
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