What people are reading online are blanket descriptions of the H-60. I’m sure they’re reading something like “the Black Hawk crew consists of two pilots and two gunners…” That’s just a general description.
The min crew used to be dictated by the old commanders guide (below) but they replaced it years ago and left it out. I believe it’s all unit level SOP dictated now so not completely sure.
@Flymy47 might shed some light on that.
Typical crew mix is two qualified pilots up front, with few exceptions such as students with an IP. Those two pilots one has to be a qualified PC and the other can be PI. In the back, such as the accident case, you’ve got a crew engineer or “crew chief” (CE). The person in the back doesn’t have to be a CE though. If they’re a rated or non rated crew member qualified and current under NVGs, they can sit in the gunners seat and perform duties. Unless something has changed, can’t be a pax in those two seats. Usually, for formation flying, two crew members are required in the back for NVGs. However, again at Novosel they allow just one in the back. Kinda funny how in regular units the requirements are higher than in student training…amazing I’m still alive. Oh, and unless they’re on a “monkey harness” they shouldn’t be going back and forth to the gunners seats. It’s possible, but not likely.
So yeah, 3 crew members most likely the min here for NVGs. I saw a CNN interview with a former Army H-60 pilot and she said the same thing I was thinking. I’m sure the Army will rethink their min crew requirements after the accident. Also, it’s not like they’d try to get away with less than required crew members for a reason. Everything has a mission briefing process and whoever was the mission briefing officer (MBO) they’re not gonna sign off if not in SOP compliance. Then, the final approval authority, most likely company commander or even battalion commander, isn’t going to approve it either.
That reminds me. The stupid uniformed comments about the female in this case. Morons making videos on YT that have no idea about Army Aviation or even helicopters. A 500 hr pilot as a PC, if in fact she was a PC, is not unheard of. I wasn’t exactly a rock star and I got it at around 400 hrs. This isn’t Kara Hultgren times where DoD was pushing an agenda. Women aren’t unique in military aviation anymore. They’re everywhere and they’re treated the same as the men.
Now, that doesn’t mean that both of these two aviators won’t have their records scrutinized. I’m actually curious if the Army even allows access outside of the Army Aviation Safety Center to those records. Generally it doesn’t fall under a FOIA. The was a fatal years ago with a CW4 who crashed his Lancair and the Army wouldn’t even release his training records to the NTSB. Be interesting to see how this plays out.