SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- The MQ-9
Reaper flight training school at Hancock Field Air National Guard Base has
graduated its first series of active duty Air Force MQ-9 operators since the
program was established in November 2011.
Ten active duty Air Force pilots and ten
sensor operators completed the program at the MQ-9 Formal Training Unit - run
by the New York Air National Guard’s 174th Fighter Wing from February through
May 2012.
The 174th FW is responsible for training
all MQ-9 pilot/sensor operator teams in the Air Force, Air Force Reserve, and
Air National Guard, and allied air forces.
“We are proud of training the next
generation of MQ-9 aircrew from across the Air Force right here at Hancock
Field,” said Air Force Col. Greg Semmel, commander of the 174th FW and Hancock
Field installation commander. “This mission is particularly important due to
the ongoing impact that the MQ-9 has had on protecting the lives of American
troops on the battlefield.”
Airmen with the174th FW have also been
training all MQ-9 maintenance technicians for the active Air Force, Air Force
Reserve, Air National Guard and allied nations since 2009.
About 80 airmen are trained by the unit
each year to employ the MQ-9 and graduation from the course awards the aircrew
with an initial qualification on the weapon system.
The initial qualification training lasts
about three and a half months, and consists of about 100 hours of classroom
academics, 40 hours of simulator instruction, and 30 hours of flight training.
Upon completion of the FTU, the pilots and sensor operators return to their
home-station for mission specific training to become combat ready aircrew.
The 174th FW maintains a launch and
recovery facility at Wheeler-Sack Army Airfield at Fort Drum, New York, from which
MQ-9 students fly training missions. During take-off the aircraft is under the
control of experienced aircrew members. Once it reaches operating altitude a
student pilot manning a ground based cockpit at Hancock Field takes command via
satellite downlink control system.
While the student pilots are learning to
fly the aircraft using different training scenarios the enlisted sensor
operators are learning how to operate the sophisticated sensor equipment on the
MQ-9 which allows both aircrew members to assist troops on the ground with
information and precision weapons strikes.
Along with providing MQ-9 training for
the Air Force, the 174th FW conducts MQ-9 operations over Afghanistan on a
daily basis from a command facility at the base. Airmen assigned to the base
also provide support for other Air Force and Air National Guard missions around
the world and here at home.
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