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By: 27th February 2006 at 16:52 Permalink - Edited 1st January 1970 at 01:00
-Not sure but I'm dreading mine :( :( :( Mark :(
By: 27th February 2006 at 17:00 Permalink - Edited 1st January 1970 at 01:00
-lol, would be better if i knew what ther were going to do to me!
By: 27th February 2006 at 19:39 Permalink - Edited 1st January 1970 at 01:00
-It is pretty intensive. But if you have a lady doc, you can look forward to the 'cough' check.
Joking apart, review of family history, ECG, blood and urine sample, and it goes on. Good luck. It is worth it in the end.
By: 27th February 2006 at 20:19 Permalink - Edited 1st January 1970 at 01:00
-thanks for that
By: 27th February 2006 at 20:21 Permalink - Edited 1st January 1970 at 01:00
-You are very welcome.
By: 27th February 2006 at 21:37 Permalink - Edited 1st January 1970 at 01:00
-It is (gulp!) 19 years since I had my last one at Biggin Hill, I had 3, all the same, at 16 for ATC Flying Scholarship, 17 for Pilot and 18 for NCO Aircrew. I was successful on the first and last attempts!
It is very thorough, obviously, the eye test is in 2 parts, vision capability and the actual health of your eyes, there is also a difficult hearing check (what?) and an ECG. It takes about 8 hours to get through it, but most of that is either waiting or moving between the test areas, and yes you do get a (cough!) hernia check.
A couple of things: be careful of the length of your lib from bum to knee in sitting position, I had to encourage the nurse to make sure I was sat correctly as I was on (over) the limit for the bang seat.
Another thing to watch for is admitting to Hay Fever, if you get it, then it may impair your flying (Ears full), and it is a chargeable offence to self-medicate.....
If you want to get some practice, then go for a Regular Commissions Board with the army first, it is much, much harder and the RAF entry seems much easier afterwards :cool:
If the selection process is the same as in my day, the aptitude tests are mind-blowing, eg you do one test to remember sequences of up to 14 numbers, then you do another test to keep a spot in some cross-hairs, then next you do the first test with your left hand, whilst doing the other test with your right hand...... :eek:
Finally the Interview, whatevre your views you want to fly fast jet, they recruit for that and stream downwards, I made the mistake of admitting to want to fly Hercs (doing a real job, humanitarian effort in Ethiopa at the time, etc).
Saying all that it has probably changed a lot since I did it, and it is really easy...... :D
Posts: 16
By: Jon01 - 27th February 2006 at 16:41
Im wondering what actually happens in an Aircrew medical (RAF, RN)eg, eyetests, hearing tests, what else do they do? Thanks