mightynimbus
Well-Known Member
Air Tanker Group Supervisor.
Air Tactical Group Supervisor
Air Tanker Group Supervisor.
Air Tactical Group Supervisor
the SEATs can generally attack on their own without a leadplane, as they’re slow enough to see where everything is.The SEATSs are much more easy to manage in this way, in terms of having them hold while others are employing, simply due to being smaller, more maneuverable, and even able to proceed to/from the fire area as a flight in many cases.
Nicely done!!Not as applicable to this conversation of USFS contract aircraft, but I come from the land of CAL FIRE (formerly CDF) and it’s the same story with their Grumman S-2T tankers as it is with your SEATs above. Also the standard CAL FIRE Air Attack used in many parts of California is an OV-10 Bronco, which is badass.
The S-2Ts are maneuverable enough that no lead plane is required, and they tend to dispatch one OV-10 Air Attack, two S-2T tankers and a copter for vegetation initial attack.
I know Mike already knows this part, but for the benefit of the less initiated readers: Air Attack orbits high over the FTA and then tankers are altitude separated in the stack below and cleared in to drop one at a time by Air Attack. The tankers also orbit opposite of air attack to help see and avoid. If too many tankers are in the stack I’ve seen air attack put them at an intermediate holding fix and then clear them into the stack, clear to drop and then clear to depart for load and return.
Anatomy of the firefighting airspace:
![]()
Source and good overview: How aerial firefighters attack wildfires with air tankers, Broncos, and Super Hueys – Midwest ATC
I mentioned getting ahold of an ICS205 Radio Communications form earlier because I’ve always been impressed with the complexity of radio traffic the ATGS has to monitor.
They are (and I’m probably missing some):
VHF FM radio:
VHF AM Radio:
- “Air Tactics” channel - where Air Attack coordinates and directs the tankers on where to drop.
- “Command channel” - ATGS coordinates with IC and dispatch.
- “Air to Ground” - ATGS coordinates with IC/ops/branch/division leadership on where to drop and feedback on drop
- “GUARD” - Their radios monitor FM firefighting guard, a separate channel not to be confused with aviation VHF/UHF AM guard.
- (Note that all the ground division units get dedicated VHF FM tactical channels, but I don’t believe those are monitored by the ATGS.)
With all this radio chatter going on I have incredible respect for ATGS for keeping situational awareness. It makes sense why they need so many FM and AM radios, and why the FM radio units (and their custom audio panels) are so complicated. I imagine they appreciate any help the pilot can give with splitting some of the workload.
- “Air to Air” - Tankers have an air to air freq on the aviation radio to coordinate their positions and keep track of each other and air attack for collision avoidance.
- “Helicopter Air Tactics” (I forget the official term) - The helos on the incident are relegated to VHF AM aviation radios for comms. On small incidents they report to the ATGS, while on larger incidents they get their own helicopter air attack called the Helicopter Coordinator (HLCO, pronounced “Hel-Co”).
- “Briefing channel” - On a big incident the air attack aircraft work in shifts, so the outgoing ATGS will brief the incoming ATGS on a dedicated frequency.
Edit: These things are complicated.
View attachment 65773
View attachment 65774
an audio panel with 6 comm radios and then a "music" input did make me giggleNot as applicable to this conversation of USFS contract aircraft, but I come from the land of CAL FIRE (formerly CDF) and it’s the same story with their Grumman S-2T tankers as it is with your SEATs above. Also the standard CAL FIRE Air Attack used in many parts of California is an OV-10 Bronco, which is badass.
The S-2Ts are maneuverable enough that no lead plane is required, and they tend to dispatch one OV-10 Air Attack, two S-2T tankers and a copter for vegetation initial attack.
I know Mike already knows this part, but for the benefit of the less initiated readers: Air Attack orbits high over the FTA and then tankers are altitude separated in the stack below and cleared in to drop one at a time by Air Attack. The tankers also orbit opposite of air attack to help see and avoid. If too many tankers are in the stack I’ve seen air attack put them at an intermediate holding fix and then clear them into the stack, clear to drop and then clear to depart for load and return.
Anatomy of the firefighting airspace:
![]()
Source and good overview: How aerial firefighters attack wildfires with air tankers, Broncos, and Super Hueys – Midwest ATC
I mentioned getting ahold of an ICS205 Radio Communications form earlier because I’ve always been impressed with the complexity of radio traffic the ATGS has to monitor.
They are (and I’m probably missing some):
VHF FM radio:
VHF AM Radio:
- “Air Tactics” channel - where Air Attack coordinates and directs the tankers on where to drop.
- “Command channel” - ATGS coordinates with IC and dispatch.
- “Air to Ground” - ATGS coordinates with IC/ops/branch/division leadership on where to drop and feedback on drop
- “GUARD” - Their radios monitor FM firefighting guard, a separate channel not to be confused with aviation VHF/UHF AM guard.
- (Note that all the ground division units get dedicated VHF FM tactical channels, but I don’t believe those are monitored by the ATGS.)
With all this radio chatter going on I have incredible respect for ATGS for keeping situational awareness. It makes sense why they need so many FM and AM radios, and why the FM radio units (and their custom audio panels) are so complicated. I imagine they appreciate any help the pilot can give with splitting some of the workload.
- “Air to Air” - Tankers have an air to air freq on the aviation radio to coordinate their positions and keep track of each other and air attack for collision avoidance.
- “Helicopter Air Tactics” (I forget the official term) - The helos on the incident are relegated to VHF AM aviation radios for comms. On small incidents they report to the ATGS, while on larger incidents they get their own helicopter air attack called the Helicopter Coordinator (HLCO, pronounced “Hel-Co”).
- “Briefing channel” - On a big incident the air attack aircraft work in shifts, so the outgoing ATGS will brief the incoming ATGS on a dedicated frequency.
Edit: These things are complicated.
View attachment 65773
View attachment 65774
Nicely done!!
Better than the NWCG FTA "flat screen" 8.5X11" Poster I see so much of
Looks like better Technisonics gear, too!!
Is that Dauntless?
Nicely done!!
Better thean the NWCG FTA "flat screen" 8.5X11" Poster I see so much of
Looks like better Technisonics gear, too!!
The TDFM is our tactical radios we have. They work great and make sense, once you get a quick training on them. Without that, they look very convoluted.
That doc may be old.Anatomy of the firefighting airspace:
![]()
Everything about this reads like a FAC-A requirement that is being done by an organization going through motions and doing like what they’ve seen in movies…
Air to ground effects is a precise and time sensitive effort. The fact they don’t put the effort into working that out on the ground ahead of time and instead opt for the “we will do it live!” method equates to fully half that effort being pissed away in the atmosphere as nothing more than noise and smoke.
Hi I’m here all week, try the veal, and yes to anybody reading this thinking “wtf does he know about it,” I’ve been an air mission commander and stack warden as well as a FAC-A, so yeah I’ll happily come see you demo the system and then show you how it should be done after a half dozen flights to get my feet under me in whatever platform you’re sporting.
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haha classic Army dude trying to come in and take the stack. You better be in a Mohawk or better with that bad-itude my friend![]()
The number of times I’ve had the JTAC job handed over to me because they didn’t have the amps to push the GFC plan to the east aircraft is astounding. The guys rolling with special people, they have the kit and training to do it themselves. The guys 2-4 deep to support a brigade, with equipment from the 90s, not so much.
CAS isn’t that hard, synchronization between it, fires, and maneuver is the difficult part. More to that the balance of all the communication parts is what will or won’t break off how much ass you can bring to the fight.
I’ve had as many as 7 radios to do all the things I needed to be doing. And 2 digital nets on top that. By all means put me in a faster/higher platform with more sensors. I can do more there.
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oh for sure, the comms are mind scrambling. I've had a small taste of FAC(A) and it was literally just front seat detach from back seat, talk about the big picture on ICS, and otherwise run your program independently but also coordinated. And we couldn't even use more than 3 radios at time due to CVI limitations. Awaiting Mike's comment about when they did it single seat, with a compass, a grease pen, a hot pocket, and one secure UHF net![]()
Awaiting Mike's comment about when they did it single seat, with a compass, a grease pen, a hot pocket, and one secure UHF net![]()