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Sat, Feb 16, 2008

Greyhawks Reach 60,000 Mishap-Free Flight Hours

Nice Flying By Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 161

A 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing squadron recently achieved 60,000 Class A mishap-free hours. Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 161 reached the benchmark during a training flight at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, CA on January 29.

"It's incredible to be with a squadron when it reaches the 60,000 mark," said Capt. Grace Kelly, a pilot who was flying at the time of the exercise. "It reflects the squadron's long history of professionalism."

Achieving this is made even more remarkable by the number of combat tours the squadron has participated in, according to Capt. Scott Horton, the squadron's operations officer. Throughout a seven-month deployment the squadron flies twice the amount of hours than they would while in garrison, explained Horton.

The squadron's last Class A mishap, a mishap resulting in the loss of life or damage in excess of $1 million, occurred in 1995 while the squadron was deployed.

"CH-46 squadrons that are attached to MEU's also get hit against their record if one of the attached aircraft has a Class A accident," said Lt. Col. W. Dan Cerkan, the 3rd MAW director of safety and standardization.

"HMM-161's achievement is not a very common occurrence and is very significant due to the fact that many of these hours were performed in combat operations, nighttime and in poor weather as the CASEVAC squadron."

More than 18,000 of the hours were flown in combat zones, according to Lt. Col. Kevin J. Lee, the commanding officer of the squadron.

"This isn't just an accomplishment for our squadron," said Sgt. Courtney E. Pickering, a crew chief with the Greyhawks. "It's an accomplishment for the whole CH-46E community because a lot of Marines have passed through the squadron during the last 13 years."

In the past three years, only two other CH-46E squadrons have achieved this benchmark.

"This was an amazing month, it wasn't just about the 60,000 hour mark, it was about celebrating history, safety and pride in ownership," said Lee.

(Aero-News salutes Lance Cpl. Austin Goacher, MCAS Miramar)

FMI: www.3maw.usmc.mil/mag16/hmm161/default.asp

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