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UK SAR 2013 privatisation: the new thread

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Old 21st Jul 2013, 22:49
  #681 (permalink)  
 
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Breathe deeply Vie! Everyone who has seen the navy SAR flights do their thing up close knows that one of the key elements helping them to punch above their weight is the responsibility shared with the back. Hopefully one of them will PM to JB and help him understand.

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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 07:48
  #682 (permalink)  
 
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JunglieBeefer - you have made my point far better than I did

Bristow have said theirs will be a new ethos distilled from the best of the current systems - unfortunately from what can be gathered about their recruiting and manning policy it will be Navy SAR in a different uniform

Last edited by Lala Steady; 22nd Jul 2013 at 07:51.
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 08:24
  #683 (permalink)  
 
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Junglie - when will you ever learn. La-la is only here to 'hook' people.....stay away if you can't cope with the baiting. However when you do speak you speak the truth!

Vie: SAR, like ALL complex tasking is only EVER about Captaincy. The term describes the command decision making that goes on. It is a generic description not neccessarily owned by pilots. Some Navy cabs have Captains sitting in the back as Observers for eg.

RAF SAR first tourers will ALWAYS have a more experienced 'Captain' sitting next to them and holding their hand. They will receive advice from the rear crew but ONLY the Captain will make the final decision. Hence "Captaincy".

You might be getting it mixed up with: SAR and Captaincy.

SAR is about getting the rear crew to the scene to do their stuff.
Captaincy is all about carrying out that act - safely and efficiently.

Overall - and this is for everyone out there....do not misunderstand:
SAR is NOT a black art, it is a run of the mill secondary duty for "experienced" crews. Nothing more and nothing less. However many have tried to build massive empires on the back of it. [Bit like HR!].
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 08:58
  #684 (permalink)  
 
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Originally Posted by jimf671
The Coastguard have statutory responsibility for SAR below the high water mark and the routine location reference system is latitude and longitude.

The Police have statutory responsibility for SAR above the high water mark and the routine location reference system is the postcode.
Having spent the last ten years flying as a police air observer can I just say that we don't fly anywhere based on a postcode..?

Admittedly we tend to cover a small area compared to a SAR crew and the majority of it is done with a street atlas. However when called (fairly regularly) to go further afield we simply breakout the maps and navigate there..!!

The point is we actually do know how to use OS, Grid, Lat/Long... Whatever gets thrown at us.

Postcodes can be useful when using Skyforce... However only when navigating to a house.

We're more versatile than that thank you.
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 08:59
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Bristow have said theirs will be a new ethos distilled from the best of the current systems ... it will be Navy SAR in a different uniform
So proving that the RN is the best then?
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 09:08
  #686 (permalink)  
 
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TC - you of all people should know better! Op Captaincy in the RAFSARF is exactly that - and there are no filters protecting a new Captain, he or she could be on shift with the least experienced co-pilot the day after being awarded captaincy - it's one of the reasons the Sqn Cdrs make such a big deal about it.

And, to be clear, SAR is not a black art but it requires lots of training to be good at it and 'run of the mill' it certainly isn't but only people with TC's background insist on thinking like that
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 09:24
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Crab: By that account then one could argue that a not very experienced RAF crew might be called upon to do any SAR mission - hence why it is relatively straight forward and uncomplicated and 'secondary'.....

My previous post was extolling the virtues of 'new' RAF ab initio's being escorted everywhere by more experienced Captains to start...before they are 'let loose'.
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 11:30
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... it will be Navy SAR in a different uniform
Do me a favour 'switch_on_lofty'. Send me the link to the Bristow job ad for Observers. I must have missed that one.
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 11:55
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La La et al,

My apologies I agree wholeheartedly that SAR is all about the guys down the back - however the argument I was responding to revolved around how there was going to be a drop in capability due to a change in aircraft - seeing as it is safe to assume that initally the majority of winchops and winchmen will be coming from the military and that their skills are not specific to a particular aircraft (dynamic risk assessment / paramedic skills / winch skills and a plethora of others ...) - I assumed that the drop in capability you were refering to (and specifically local area knowledge), related to of pilots adapting to the new aircraft - hence my point.

My post was not clear in this regard and apologies for any dispersion cast at the guys down the back.

Humbly yours,

JB

PS. La La with regard to you comment re drop in capability - what complete guff!
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 12:29
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If you replace a large proportion of the crab crews who do have the local knowledge and strength in depth from multiple SAR tours and replace them with 'done one tour and therefore SAR qualified' crews from the RN who only operate at 2 sites in UK - that's where you will find a drop in capability.
So people getting in via the Managed Transition are guaranteed a job at or near their current mil location, to preserve local knowledge? Indeed...
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 20:41
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Can I just say how much I am enjoying this thread

Lots of crabs just digging and digging.....


....and every self impressed statement makes them less and less likely to make up much of future SAR.

Carry on!

p.s. it's just hovering.
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 21:04
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... makes them less and less likely to make up much of future SAR.
What are you trying to say Tourist? Don't they have PA Scale in the Navy?
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Old 22nd Jul 2013, 23:13
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Link as requested

jimf671 (is this your Dii login btw?)

Try google next time but here you go!

https://bristowsar.com/index.php/recruitment/

I'd suggest that WinchOp isn't quite the same as Observer but make of that what you will. Compared to an Observers' primary roles the winch bit is fairly straightforward from what I've seen.

SoL
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Old 23rd Jul 2013, 09:56
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(Last three from a very very early previous existence! DII much more complicated.)

One of the reasons that I am so sure that all the current providers have something to bring to the table is because of these differences in responsibilities and career structure either in the back or in the front.

This is the UK's first entirely planned service. If Bristow can be Darwinian about it then the diversity can breed evolution.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 19:01
  #695 (permalink)  
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Bristow Group Sign Contract for 11 AW189 Helicopters for UK Search & Rescue | AgustaWestland
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 19:34
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For me, one of the slightly more interesting bits about the Agusta Westland press release is this
The contract was signed by ..... Geoff Hoon, Managing Director International Business, AgustaWestland,
Now, I could have sworn that there was a Labour Secretary of State for Defence called Geoff Hoon. If I remember correctly, he was rather suddenly reshuffled to Transport, and was subsequently dropped from all frontline politics after the 2010 Cash for Influence scandal. Or perhaps that was someone called Buff Hoon?

So, whoever it was, it seems that that famous revolving door is still merrily going round - especially when you remember that when that Hoon was Def Sec, AW was awarded a £1.7billion contract as preferred bidder to supply Future Lynx. I don't remember any other firm being invited to bid.

Funny old world.

airsound (who apologises for thread drift)
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 20:45
  #697 (permalink)  
 
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Not so much thread drift as the revolving door not being news!

Anyone heard anything about the SAR prototype? That would be much more interesting.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 22:06
  #698 (permalink)  
 
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I must say, I am surprised to see the SVP International Business getting his mug shot into a UK signing photo opportunity, as one would think a photo shoot at Palam Air Force Base in India would be more in keeping with his position.

As some say, a funny old world.
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Old 31st Jul 2013, 12:24
  #699 (permalink)  
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AW189 arrives in UK for SAR certification | Helihub - the Helicopter Industry Data Source

Last edited by meanttobe; 31st Jul 2013 at 12:28.
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Old 11th Aug 2013, 19:47
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Thumbs down

On their homepage https://bristowsar.com/ Bristow are claiming that they are 'the leading provider of search and rescue services in the UK'. How have they managed to reach these heights in just six weeks of GapSAR and what is the yardstick by which they are measuring their excellence?

Elsewhere they claim to have 'enormous respect for the service that our military colleagues have provided over the last 70 years of UK Search and Rescue'. Perhaps they could show some of that respect by dropping the claim that they already exceed their capabilities.
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