 We're here at Fort Bragg, conducting aerial gunnery for our annual training. Aerial gunnery is basically what it sounds like we're shooting gunnery qualification tables from the aircraft. I'm an Apache pilot working as an assistant S3. For aerial gunnery I've been in the talk doing a little bit of battle tracking with our 15 Papas. We track what aircrafts up, what aircraft needs to be moved, what aircraft stands for maintenance. When I'm not doing that I'm up in the tower helping out as OIC or RSO and just kind of facilitating getting as many crews table six qualified as we can. The table four five and six are what we're focused on shooting here at Fort Bragg this year. Table four and five are shot during the day and it's a mix of hover running and diving fire using all the weapon systems 30 millimeter 2.75 inch rockets and hell fires. Table six is our qualification table. It's pretty much the same mix of the different modes of flight and the weapon systems but it's at night so it's a little more difficult and requires a lot more concentration from both pilots. The crew consists of two pilots piloting the back seats primarily on the flight controls with a few engagements from the back seat but the majority of the gunnery tables run from the front seat where they have more accurate control over all the weapon systems. The tower is used to sequence the aircraft in for their gunnery tables. There you got the OIC that's running the range.