Chinook crews fly 'All Night Long'

By Spc. Darriel SwattsOctober 26, 2011

Chinook crews fly 'All Night Long'
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Chinook crews fly 'All Night Long'
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Chinook crews fly 'All Night Long'
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Chinook crews fly 'All Night Long'
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CAMP TAJI, Iraq (Army News Service, Oct. 25, 2011) -- Chinook helicopters with B Company, 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, flew more than 1,100 hours moving personnel and cargo last month around Iraq.

The Chinooks are also providing a vital service during the Army's drawdown in Iraq.

"The Chinooks have been important any time we've had any drawdowns, repostures, or closing of bases," said Capt. John Allen, a staff officer with the 40th Combat Aviation Brigade. "We move anything and everything we can to help expedite the whole process. Plus, we help take a load off the C-130s and other fixed-wing assets, and oftentimes we are the sole provider of aerial assets to the bases that can't support fixed-wing aircraft."

At Camp Taji, B Company, 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 211th Aviation Regiment, is deployed with the 1st General Support Aviation Battalion, 171st Aviation Regiment, a Georgia Army National Guard unit attached to the 40th Combat Aviation Brigade from the California Army National Guard. B Company is the only Chinook unit left in Iraq.

The Chinook is a large tandem-rotor helicopter with a rotor diameter of 60 feet. It is the Army's go-to heavy lift helicopter and equipment transporter. It is able to transport 33 troops and their gear, or three pallets of cargo, or a sling load -- which is cargo suspended below the aircraft. The aircraft can also support a combination of those three, up to 26,000 pounds.

"We are kind of like a moving company," said Sgt. Andrew Anderson, flight engineer with the 211th Aviation Regiment. "The pilots are the drivers and we are the muscle in the back getting it all done."

Chinooks are typically flown during the nighttime hours to capitalize on the additional protection offered by darkness. As a result, the 211th adopted the motto "All Night Long" from the title of a popular Lionel Ritchie tune.

At more than 98 feet long, the pilots rely heavily on flight engineers like Anderson to keep them informed about what is happening around the aircraft at all times.

Flight engineers play an integral role during CH-47 Chinook cargo helicopter flights. They are the eyes in the rear of the aircraft providing vital information to the pilots, the muscle that handles cargo, and they ensure the safety of passengers that are strapped in for the ride.

"The flight engineers in the Chinooks are really valuable," said Allen. "The amount of crew coordination that takes place between the pilots and the flight engineers is through the roof. They have instruments in the back that we can't see, so we depend on them to know what they're looking at, then be able to articulate it to us up in the front."

With as many flights the Chinook crews fly in in Iraq, the crews are hardly the same for each mission and aircrew often find themselves flying and working with different people on each flight -- sometime even with the 40th CAB's commander, Col. Mitch Medigovich, also a Chinook pilot.

"It's fun to be able to fly around with the brigade commander," said Sgt. Joe Loscheider, a flight engineer with the 2-211th. "He treats us like one of the guys. It's very informal; plus, it's nice to be able to just talk and have fun with the colonel."

As the mission in Iraq comes to an end and units start packing up to go home, the 211th continues to bring first-class service to the table until the very end. As it is stated in their motto, they'll provide coverage, "All Night Long."

Related Links:

Army.mil Fact Files: Chinook Helicopter

Army.mil: Middle East News

STAND-TO!: Combat Aviation Brigades within the Army National Guard

STAND-TO!: Operation New Dawn

U.S. Forces-Iraq on Facebook

U.S. Forces-Iraq