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by Spinosaurus 2264 days ago
Air USA (Don Kirlin, president), along with a bunch of other companies were selected as contractors for the U.S. Air Force to provide "Red Air" (adversary training) services. This is not new; the Air Force uses private companies for training as the cost savings are immense:

• Reduced flight hours and maintenance on fleet aircraft.

• Instructors do not need to be pulled from schedules.

• Fleet aircraft do not need to be hard scheduled.

• Cost per flight hour is much lower for common aggressor platforms (A-4, L-39, F1M, and now these legacy F-18s) than the aircraft the Air Force is training in.

• Private companies can more easily maintain and source parts for aircraft the military cannot (Migs, for instance).

This particular sale was the remainder of the RAAF's retired F-18 fleet, which Canada started buying in early 2019. These are _not_ Super Hornets.

Some of these companies have been around for decades. Some competitors:

• ATAC

• Top Air

• Draken

1 comments

Let us not forget the hemorrhaging of pilots from the USAF, largely due to the hostile work environment and the general bullshit they have to endure. They simply don't have enough experienced people to provide this function.
This is interesting. Anywhere I can learn more about this or if you have the chance, would you expand?
> What if you could fly the F-22, the preeminent fifth-generation air superiority fighter in the world? According to internal data from the Aircrew Crisis Task Force, last year even that community retained just 30 percent of pilots eligible to leave.

... Wow.

Years ago I read a discussion between two people interested in USAF careers. One of them wanted to fly the F-22. The other told him to get the credentials and apply for the position. I remember wondering: you can just apply to pilot the world's most advanced supermaneuverable stealth fighter? Why would any F-22 pilot want to give up their position? I assumed it was because of the problems with the life support system:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_Martin_F-22_Raptor#Op...

I never thought the USAF could have morale problems...

Thank you!