Posted January 10, 2017 10:00 am by Comments

By Tactical-Life

The U.S. Air Force has given select A-10 Thunderbolt IIs an upgrade designed to boost search and rescue operations, the service announced.

The new lightweight airborne recovery system, dubbed the LARS V-12, enables A-10 pilots to communicate more effectively with people on the ground. Think downed pilots, pararescuemen and joint terminal attack controllers. The system gives pilots the GPS coordinates of ground personnel and allows them to talk via voice or text, the press release says.

Over the past three months, technicians from the 309th Aircraft Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) have installed the LARS V-12 system on 19 A-10C Thunderbolt IIs assigned to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base and Moody Air Force Base in Arizona and Georgia, respectively.

“This urgent operational need arose in August (2016),” Timothy Gray, acting director 309th AMARG, said in a statement. “Air Combat Command and the A-10 Program Office asked me if AMARG could complete 16 aircraft by (Dec. 16). I said, ‘Absolutely!’ It was awesome to see Team AMARG take on this massive logistical challenge, build a production machine, find facilities, manpower, equipment, tools, and make material kits (to) execute the requirement.”

“A-10 pilots take the Combat Search …Read the Rest

Source:: Tactical Life

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