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  1. Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    175
    #1
    [SIZE=2][/SIZE][SIZE=2]Monessa Catuncan: A Filipina takes flight [/SIZE]

    Saturday, 25 October 2008 12:11 Billy Dela Cruz/AJPress




    UNITED States Air Force F-16 fighter pilot Monessa Catuncan doesn’t just maneuver an aircraft whenever she’s on air—she also carries the Philippine flag and the pride of the country it represents and the people in it.


    The F-16 Fighting Falcon or most commonly known as the “Viper” is a state-of-the- art fighter aircraft. It has been a high-performance weapon system for the US and allied nations for it has been used in numerous air-to-air combats. This specific aircraft has exceeded all the potential threat fighter aircrafts. Its feature as an offense-defense weapon is very precise that it can perform on any weather condition. This kind of plane is a complicated device meant to be handled by highly qualified pilots. The F-16 or the Viper has played vital roles in most of America’s wars with the most recent being in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. An F-16 fighter plane is what Monessa Catuncan navigates.


    But before Monessa even set foot to the elite US Air Force, this humble Pinay, like almost everybody else earned her way to success.


    The twenty-six-year- old Monessa is the youngest daughter of Ramona and Teody Catuncan of Mesquite, Texas. She graduated in 2000 as a Valedictorian in a class of 693 in Mesquite High School. She was then accepted to the United States Air Force Academy (USAFA) in Colorado Springs, that same year. While at USAFA, Monessa, aside from pursuing her desired career as part of the US Air Force, served as a Squadron Commander, a Division-1 tennis player, a Glider Instructor Pilot, and a member of the Glider Acrobatic Team, among other essential positions. In 2004, Monessa graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Astronautical Engineering from the USAFA.


    Like all of her colleagues, Monessa went through an Undergraduate Pilot Training (UPT) before becoming a fighter pilot. However, she didn’t just pass her UPT – she excelled in it.


    She then started her pilot career flying a T-6 Texan at the Moody Air Force Base in Valdosta, Georgia. This aircraft is the basic trainer for every Air Force aspiring pilots. After this training, students will then choose whether to fly fighter/bomber aircrafts or cargo/refueling aircrafts. Most of the time, only top students in the class are given the option to fly fighter/bomber aircrafts.


    Monessa proved herself, and finished the course as one of the top student-pilots in her class. She was then chosen to fly either a fighter or a bomber aircraft. After her course at Moody Air Force, she went to Laughlin Air Force Base in Del Rio, Texas and Sheppard Air Force Base in Wichita Falls to fly the T-38. In her training there, Monessa learned the basics of formation flying, offensive and defensive fighter maneuvering, and surface attack bombing techniques. Monessa went through intense studying and was put in a variety of stressful situations in order to pass this training.


    From flying T- 38, she had an option of choosing from different aircrafts like the F-15E Strike Eagle, F-15C Eagle, F-16 Fighting Falcon, B-1B Lancer, A-10 Warthog, B-52 Stratofortress, and F/A-22 Raptor, and T-6 or T-38 are also options. After her T-38 course, Monessa requested to fly an F-16 Falcon, and she got what she wanted.


    Monessa went through with her training to hone her skill at maneuvering fighter jets at Luke Air Force Base in Phoenix, Arizona where she learned how to control and apply tactics of the F-16 Fighter Falcon, or Viper. Monessa finished her course at Luke Air Force Base with flying colors and was part of the “Lucky number 13” graduate from class 2007. She was the only woman in her group, not to mention the only Filipino to pass the much-coveted pilot course.


    Monessa, who just recently pinned on Captain, is now assigned to 34th Fighter Squadron at Hill Air Force Base in Salt Lake City, Utah. She and her squadron just recently came back from Iraq where they served and supported the Army Troops on the ground through a variety of close air support missions.


    The US Air Force is an elite organization and to a pilot, an F-16 fighter plane is a prized possession. Monessa, through her perseverance and hard work, has earned not only the fly the F-16, but also the pride and honor of defending the United States, as well as making the Filipinos proud.


    Story URL:
    http://www.asianjou rnal.com/ galing-pinoy/ 59-galing- pinoy/ 379-monessa- catuncan- a- filipina-takes- flight.html
    (www.asianjournal. com)

    [SIZE=4]F-16 Fighting Falcon Specifications[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Primary Function:Multirole fighter[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Contractor:Lockheed[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Crew:F-16C: one [/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]F-16D: one or two[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Unit Cost:F-16A/B: $14.6 million (fiscal 98 constant dollars)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]F-16C/D: $18.8 million (fiscal 98 constant dollars)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Powerplant F-16C/D: one Pratt and Whitney F100-PW-200/220/229 or one General Electric F110-GE-100/129[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]DimensionsLength:49 feet, 5 inches (14.8 meters)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Wingspan:32 feet, 8 inches (9.8 meters)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Height:16 feet (4.8 meters)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]WeightsEmpty:19,100 lb (8663 kg) -- F-16C[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Maximum Takeoff:37,500 pounds (16,875 kilograms)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]PerformanceSpeed:1,500 mph (Mach 2 at altitude)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Ceiling:Above 50,000 feet (15 kilometers)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Range:Over 2,100 nm (2,425 mi; 3,900 km)[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=1]Armament One M-61A1 20mm multibarrel cannon with 500 rounds; external stations can carry up to six air-to-air missiles, conventional air-to-air and air-to-surface munitions and electronic countermeasure pods.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=1]http://www.globalaircraft.org/planes/f-16_falcon.pl[/SIZE]
    Last edited by russpogi; November 8th, 2008 at 10:14 PM. Reason: edited spacing...

  2. Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Posts
    28
    #2
    Galing!

    That's was my dream before I found out I have a bad case of motion sickness.

  3. Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    2,640
    #3
    Galing ng Pinay! (Take note: Pinay)

    Ako rin nga I always wanted to take flying lessons pero lagi akong inuuna ng nerbyos! But I love travelling kase. (hehehehe)

    Nakakatuwa naman at meron nanaman tayong maipagmamalaki... May pag-asa pa rin tayong mga Pinoy!

  4. Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    416
    #4
    mapakinabangan ka sana dito sa pinas, kaya lang TORA-TORA pa dito, tama yung dyan ka na lang....

  5. Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    3,722
    #5
    ^^ bai, ganito ba ang ibig mong sabihin?



    Pinay pilots are on the rise. That PAL jet in the background was flown by a female Captain. I forgot her surname but she announced herself as Capt. Rowena .... during the flight.

    Girls Rule!!

    .

  6. Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Posts
    850
    #6
    Quote Originally Posted by The10thBEE View Post
    UNITED States Air Force F-16 fighter pilot Monessa Catuncan doesn’t just maneuver an aircraft whenever she’s on air—she also carries the Philippine Flag and the pride of the country it represents and the people in it.
    That's BullS***. Only native-born US citizens are allowed to fly the high-value jets in the US Air Force. She would never be allowed to have any Philippine flag or foreign emblems attaced to her uniform.

  7. Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    39,162
    #7
    Just goes to prove that we Filipinos, can achieve and excel at anything!

    Now, let's put all our minds and efforts into honest-to-goodness nation-building....

    6909:seehearspeak:

  8. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    1,985
    #8
    What the heck is a "Viper"? The F-16 is known only as the Fighting Falcon and the Air Force doesn't use snakes in naming their aircraft, the Navy uses snakes in their names.

    Naturalized citizens are allowed to fly fighters for the Air Force not just US born citizens. As for having a Philippine flag in her uniform that would not be allowed so maybe she has a a small one in her pocket or the author meant it in a figurative symbolic way and not literal. She's a Captain now let us hope she is good enough to go up the next rank since that is when the men are separated from the boys. Then she'll get to live on the street with the Colonels and General.
    Last edited by redorange; November 8th, 2008 at 01:11 PM.

  9. Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Posts
    22,704
    #9
    Quote Originally Posted by hein View Post
    That's BullS***. Only native-born US citizens are allowed to fly the high-value jets in the US Air Force. She would never be allowed to have any Philippine flag or foreign emblems attaced to her uniform.
    So you can't be Filipino and a native-born American? Me and a whole bunch of other people would beg to differ... :hysterical:

    There's no doubt that she is in the Air Force... she's on the roster at Laughlin AFB in the US.

    What I doubt is the authenticity of that picture. No way can she be that cute. Seriously...

    Ang pagbalik ng comeback...

  10. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    21,384
    #10
    ^^ I would believe na kaya ng isang Pinay yan. Pero, parang may daya yung pic.

    Pansin ko yung head. Malaki. It's not proportioned with the body. Parang ipinatong lang sa katawan.

    Yan eh, sa akin lang naman.
    Last edited by chua_riwap; November 8th, 2008 at 04:23 PM.

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Pinay F-16 Fighting Falcon Pilot