Monday, 12 May 2008
 
  Home arrow News arrow Latest arrow Squadron Homecoming Marks End of Era for Tomcats
template designed by MilitaryWives.com
 
The Spouse Medal

You have your medals,
Now, give one to Them.

Spouse Medal
Child Medal
Parent Medal
Let them know you care.

 
Home
Online Store
Video News & Views
General
Newsletter
News
Links
Contact Us
Search
Appreciation
Poetry - Music
Care Packages
Sister Sites
Support Forums
Real Estate
Military Medals
War on Terror
Legal / Patriotic
Weddings
Moving Day
Space A Travel
The Museum
Rank Information
Protocol
Cookbook
Birth Orders
Locators
Comrades in Arms
Smarty Facts
Lest We Forget
FRGs
Army Mission
Badges
Army Values
Wives Seal
World Time
Site Counter
13,307,530 visitors since 2001!
Squadron Homecoming Marks End of Era for Tomcats PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 12 March 2006

By Petty Officer 1st Class Stefanie Holzeisen-Mullen, USN
American Forces Press Service

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va., March 10, 2006  - Two strike fighter squadrons arrived at Naval Air Station Oceana here today, ending a six-month deployment and closing the book on the Tomcat as an asset in the Navy's war fighting arsenal.

The "Tomcatters" of Strike Fighter Squadron 31 and the "Black Lions" of Strike Fighter Squadron 213 were deployed with Carrier Air Wing  8 embarked on the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt.

The squadrons' "fly-off" marked the last operational flight of the F-14D Tomcat and the final stage of the squadrons' transition to the F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet. VF-213 pilots will begin F/A-18F training next month and VF-31 pilots, who are transitioning to the F/A-18E, will remain operational until September when they will fly the last Tomcat in the Navy's inventory from Oceana.

"Everyone has worked very hard, pulled together and with purpose to ensure we retire this naval aviation icon appropriately and commensurate with its long and proud legacy," Cmdr. Richard LaBranche, VF-31 commanding officer, said.

The Navy decided to decommission the Tomcat and move to the Super Hornet to lighten the workload on its people after recognizing the excessive amount of maintenance needed to keep them operational. "It takes about three to four times more maintenance man-hours per flight hour to maintain than the newer Hornet," LaBranche said. "Retiring the extremely relevant but maintenance intensive Tomcat was a way to save the exhaustive efforts of our people and better spend their labors."

For the pilots who fly them and the crews who keep them operational, the loss of the Tomcat hits close to home. "I will miss flying the Tomcat very much," LaBranche said. "Saying good bye to the Tomcat will be like saying good bye to an old friend, but in the best interest of our people, it must be done."

Throughout its 32-year service to the fleet, the Tomcat has been synonymous with excellence. Since the first aircraft entered operational service in September 1974, the Grumman Aerospace Corporation-built F-14 has seen numerous upgrades and modifications to meet the demands of the Navy as the premier carrier-based multi-role strike fighter. "It is one of the greatest fighter planes in history," Lt. Chris Rattigan, a pilot with VF-31, said. "When you think of naval aviation, you think of the Tomcat."

The Tomcat saw its first major improvements to the initial design with the F-14B, introduced in November 1987, which incorporated new General Electric F-110 engines. In 1995, an upgrade program brought the Tomcat new digital avionics and weapon system improvements. "The F-14 may be old, but with all the upgrades (over the years), there isn't anything out there tougher and more capable than the Tomcat," Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael Houlihan, an aviation structural mechanic with VF-31, said.

During this deployment, VF-31 flew more sorties and with the highest sortie completion rate of any other Tomcat squadron in recent history, LaBranche said. With a more than 99 percent sortie-completion rate and a 100 percent on-target rate when ordnance was expended during this, their final deployment, VF-31 is confident they sent the Tomcat out on a high note.

"Our successes on this deployment have been huge," Houlihan said. "We accomplished more than we had set out to do. I honestly think that VF-31 has proved that these aircraft, despite the amount of maintenance required to maintain it, have a lot of life left in them."

While deployed, VF-31 provided invaluable close-air support to troops on the ground and, together with VF-213, completed 1,163 combat sorties totaling 6,876 flight hours and dropped 9,500 pounds of ordnance.

"Our entire crew is acutely aware of the historic nature of being the very last Tomcat squadron," said LaBranche, noting the attention VF-31 is facing as they return from this final deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

"To see the sailors of this command perform so magnificently throughout five months of arduous combat operations has been inspirational for me," LaBranche said. "(The unit) has met every challenge head-on, succeeded in every endeavor and left a legacy befitting our new slogan as 'The Last Cat Standing.'"

(Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Stefanie Holzeisen-Mullen is assigned to Fleet Public Affairs Center Atlantic.)


< Prev   Next >
Login Form
Login to check for PMs, Chat
Username

Password

Remember me
Forgotten your password?
No account yet? Create one
ONE Registration good for entire network Msg Forums have different LOGIN
Visit AWW
Visit First Equity
Store Samplings
Click to view
    Spouse Medal
    Scrapbooking
    Military Houses
    Bracelets
    Military X-Stitch
    T-Shirts Clothing
    Gag Gifts
    Military Bears
    Wife Decals
    Lapel Pins
    Ornaments

Reading Suggestions
Visit the Military Chapel
Visit Happy To Be Mom

"None of the United States Armed Services (United States Marine Corps, United States Navy,
United States Army, United States Air Force, United States Coast Guard) nor any other component of the Department of Defense
has approved, endorsed, or authorized these products / services / activities."

Information presented, while deemed to be reliable, SHOULD be verified with current applicable
orders, directives, and/or instructions governing the specific branch of the United States Armed Forces.
None of the MilitaryWives.com, Inc. officers, staff, or Board of Directors guarrantee nor do they warranty
correctness of information presented as the orders, directives, and/or instructions can be changed without notice.

Copyright 2000 - 2005 Miro International Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.
Mambo is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.