What is daily life like in the Hornet RAG?
Kind of depends on which one you go to. Front office, instructor cadre, general atmosphere play into it just as much as anywhere else. In terms of flying, my squadron is a little slower moving than the other ones (122 or 106). They advertise about 8-9 months to completion, while -101 is well over a year for most folks. Not a bad thing, as living in San Diego rocks, and being a Navy guy, I won't be coming back after this. It does tend to make for a weird schedule though.....some weeks you are doing almost nothing, others you are double pumped every day. Jet availability is a big problem in the legacy hornet rags, at least from what I have seen so far. Most all of them are jets that have been booted from the fleet with high hours, so you are working with the oldest jets around generally speaking. I've probably been maintenance cancelled more than I have flown at this point. Silver lining of this is that there is a lot more time to study, and believe me, there is a TON of stuff to learn. Will hit more on that in a couple questions....
What kind of NSS is realistically competitive for jet track selection?
This really depends on the week you select. Normally anywhere above 60 will get you jets most of the time, but there are weeks where the guys with 65-70's get helos, and there are weeks where dudes with 50's get it as well (or for Marines 52 or whatever your minimum is). You are probably a lot more familiar with recent trends than I am though, so I'd just kind of take a look at those ahead of you who are selecting.
What is the primary focus in the Hornet community (as far as CAS, ACM, etc)?
Pretty much everything.......good at everything, master at none as some would say. In the FRS you will go through 3 basic stages, transition (fams, forms, all-weather-intercepts, in flight refueling), Air to Ground (basic weps, CAS, urban-CAS, LAT-low-altititude-training, NVG's, and a few other odds and ends), and then Air-to-air (BFM, fighter weps, self escort strike), and then of course you go to the boat again, and at night this time. So in short, there is not really any specific area of focus, though I guess you could take a look at the current situation in OEF and determine what it is that we are spending the most time doing currently.
How bad does it hurt your ass cheeks crossing an ocean in an ejection seat?
Never crossed the ocean in one, but I will say that after about an hour or so, it starts to get pretty uncomfortable. Same goes for the T-45 should you go the jet route. Luckily, most of our training flights are not much more than a 1.0, though you will come back, de-arm, then spend another 20-30 mins going through hot-pits and possibly more waiting for a follow on crew to walk for a hot-seat, so even a 1.0 generally ends up being about 2.5-3.0 sitting in the chair.