Question:
Can i fly helicopters in the army?
Ajani Fortune
2011-06-20 21:09:24 UTC
I am starting my first year of army rotc this September, SO FREAKING PUMPED!!! anyway my question is when i get commissioned at the end i will be a 2nd-Lt are Lt's aloud to fly helicopters of any kind because it seems like warrant officers are the ones that do all the flying. If i as a 2nd Lt wont be eligible to fly choppers then what must i do to become a warrant officer to have a chance at flying them.
Seven answers:
Thomas R
2011-06-20 21:52:32 UTC
Around you senior year in army rotc you will be put on a ranked list called the OML (Order of Merit List) and your said rank will determine if you get a spot for helo-aviation. Getting these spots is very very hard and you must be extremely well rounded to even have a chance. That being said if you decide that rotc and being an officer isn't quite your "thing" than you can go into the warrant officer flight program which will GUARANTEE you a flight spot as long as you pass the physical to be flight qualified. Plus as an officer around the time you make captain/major you will stop flying and move into the administrative side of the army whereas a warrant officer will fly missions till the day he retires. Overall it just depends how badly you want to be a pilot. If you want to be an officer and being a pilot is merely a bonus to your commission, then go to college and do rotc and take your chances with the OML. But if your goal is strictly to fly helicopters then i would advise you to apply for the warrant officer flight program so you could be GUARANTEED a flight spot and fly for your whole career. I would also advise speaking to a recruiter because they could give you all of this Information on paper.
frasier
2016-10-04 07:40:32 UTC
yet another selection which you will have the potential to discover is the army ROTC application. Granted you could ought to attend some extra years to fly, yet you may get a extra physically powerful guidance and develop right into a 2nd Lieutenant (you should be an officer to be seen) after graduating. around your junior 3 hundred and sixty 5 days of school you "rank" your ideal 3 branches in line with what you could maximum prefer to do (ex. a million. Aviation, 2. field Artillery, 3. Chemical Corps). you could then head out to LDAC (chief progression and assessment course), and based upon your rankings there and your widespread G.P.A. the a number of branches (which you chosen for the time of your junior 3 hundred and sixty 5 days) "draft" you. in spite of the incontrovertible fact that, the Aviation branch is very aggressive so which you prefer good rankings the two academically and bodily. The ROTC application is an exceedingly great journey, and in case you're truly severe i could propose speaking to the two a recruiter or somebody interior the ROTC at your potential college or only look at the army ROTC internet internet site. desire this helps, good success! P.S. the army ROTC application will pay for the two your room and board or training plus pay you a month-to-month stipend beginning at $3 hundred your freshman 3 hundred and sixty 5 days.
Rufus
2011-06-20 21:21:06 UTC
The Army has a Warrant Officer Flight Program which you want to research. It is the only flight program which doesn't require a college degree. You would not be commissioned, you would get a warrant. The only way to be commissioned in any branch is with a bachelor's degree.
anonymous
2011-06-20 21:12:02 UTC
no wonder we lose wars, look idiot you have to learn to fly a helicopter first & i may be wrong but there probably is a screening process, you can't just jump up and down screaming i want to fly choppers.
Shawn
2011-06-20 22:10:33 UTC
Thomas hit the nail on the head.
Blue Devil
2011-06-20 22:06:16 UTC
Yes you can fly helicopters as a 2LT.
Ot
2011-06-20 21:13:49 UTC
Yes you can. Ot


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...