Yes, the cleanliness of the Army helos (though they’d call them choppers) is surprising to me as well.
Not that all the services wouldn’t be constantly trying to keep the aircraft “serviceable” which would include a certain amount of keeping it clean. But I’ve always found the aviation environment, particularly in expeditionary circumstances, to be difficult to keep up with.
As for make work, I never got the impression that it existed to keep one’s thumb on the troops. But it was always regarded as a poor idea to let a Marine get bored. Bored servicemen think of home, get lonely, get angry, find sometimes unhealthy outlets for their rage, fear, boredom.
And in the entropy of field conditions there is always something that needs cleaning/servicing; from rifles to keep them shooting to latrines to fend off the disease that follows large groups of people around.
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Not that all the services wouldn’t be constantly trying to keep the aircraft “serviceable” which would include a certain amount of keeping it clean. But I’ve always found the aviation environment, particularly in expeditionary circumstances, to be difficult to keep up with.
As for make work, I never got the impression that it existed to keep one’s thumb on the troops. But it was always regarded as a poor idea to let a Marine get bored. Bored servicemen think of home, get lonely, get angry, find sometimes unhealthy outlets for their rage, fear, boredom.
And in the entropy of field conditions there is always something that needs cleaning/servicing; from rifles to keep them shooting to latrines to fend off the disease that follows large groups of people around.
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