View Full Version : L-188 and P-3
Mike
April 30th 04, 08:25 PM
Why was the Lockheed Electra L-188 selected by the U. S. Navy for its
Orion P-3? What modifications did it undergo to become the Orion P-3?
Would there be any federal documents from that era that might be
relevant? The contract was awarded in 1959. The first delivery was in
1962.
Thanks.
Mike
damron
April 30th 04, 08:43 PM
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/aircraft/p-3-history.htm
"Mike" > wrote in message
om...
> Why was the Lockheed Electra L-188 selected by the U. S. Navy for its
> Orion P-3? What modifications did it undergo to become the Orion P-3?
> Would there be any federal documents from that era that might be
> relevant? The contract was awarded in 1959. The first delivery was in
> 1962.
> Thanks.
> Mike
Pechs1
May 1st 04, 02:27 PM
yared-<< Why was the Lockheed Electra L-188 selected by the U. S. Navy for its
Orion P-3? What modifications did it undergo to become the Orion P-3?
>><BR><BR>
Bunks, microwave, room to store perdium $....
P. C. Chisholm
CDR, USN(ret.)
Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer
Harriet and John
May 2nd 04, 01:06 AM
Pechs1 always has very pleasant thing to say about us (ugh!) but another
source is David Reade's "The Age of Orion" and the first chapter will
amplify some of the data in "damon's" URL. I was the first P3C PPC in the
Navy as CO of VP-56 at the Fleet Introduction and while it was centuries ago
(it seems) the data is good and pretty much the way I remember it.
John McIntyre
--
Author of
The Last Boomerang
A Novel of the Cold War
ISBN 1-4107-9876-3 (paper) -5 (cloth)
Available at AuthorHouse, B&N, Amazon and ISBN.com websites
or at 1-888-280-7715
"Pechs1" > wrote in message
...
> yared-<< Why was the Lockheed Electra L-188 selected by the U. S. Navy for
its
> Orion P-3? What modifications did it undergo to become the Orion P-3?
> >><BR><BR>
>
> Bunks, microwave, room to store perdium $....
> P. C. Chisholm
> CDR, USN(ret.)
> Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye
Phlyer
On Sun, 02 May 2004 00:06:16 GMT, "Harriet and John"
> wrote:
>I was the first P3C PPC in the
>Navy as CO of VP-56 at the Fleet Introduction and while it was centuries ago
>(it seems) the data is good and pretty much the way I remember it.
>
>John McIntyre
Did you deploy to KIKF shortly thereafter?
***********************************************
ACC USN ret.
NKX, BIKF, NAB, CV-63, NIR
67-69 69-71 71-74 77-80 80-85
&
74-77
Co-founder of newsgroup - RAMN
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***********************************************
Marco P.J. Borst
May 2nd 04, 11:35 AM
See our booklet "P-3 Orion, Volume 2" which still can be ordered at the
Scramble shop in The Netherlands. See www.scramble.nl.
Further information about the P-3 Orion can be found on our website
http://home.planet.nl/~p3orion
--
Regards,
Marco P.J. Borst
P-3 Orion Research Group - The Netherlands
website: http://home.planet.nl/~p3orion
MSN Messenger:
subscribe to the P-3 Orion e-mail group:
"The reward of a job well done is to have done it."
"Mike" > schreef in bericht
om...
> Why was the Lockheed Electra L-188 selected by the U. S. Navy for its
> Orion P-3? What modifications did it undergo to become the Orion P-3?
> Would there be any federal documents from that era that might be
> relevant? The contract was awarded in 1959. The first delivery was in
> 1962.
> Thanks.
> Mike
Darryl Gibbs
May 2nd 04, 01:50 PM
Oh come on, don't be silly! They didn't have microwave ovens back then!
:-)
"Pechs1" > wrote in message
...
> yared-<< Why was the Lockheed Electra L-188 selected by the U. S. Navy for
its
> Orion P-3? What modifications did it undergo to become the Orion P-3?
> >><BR><BR>
>
> Bunks, microwave, room to store perdium $....
> P. C. Chisholm
> CDR, USN(ret.)
> Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye
Phlyer
Pechs1
May 2nd 04, 02:36 PM
Darryl-<< Oh come on, don't be silly! They didn't have microwave ovens back
then!
:-) >><BR><BR>
Silly of me...back then, before the $ devalue required a bigger $ room and
before MWO, they had a complete Martha Stewart kitchen, complete with a little
Dolly in flooffy skirt and flowered apron.
'Lunch is served boys'...twinkle twinkle , batt, batt of eyelashes....
P. C. Chisholm
CDR, USN(ret.)
Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer
Bob Moore
May 2nd 04, 03:01 PM
(Pechs1) wrote
> Silly of me...back then, before the $ devalue required a bigger $ room
> and before MWO, they had a complete Martha Stewart kitchen, complete
> with a little Dolly in flooffy skirt and flowered apron.
My metalsmith earned his position on the crew with his ability to bake
(from scratch) apple pies during operation "Market Time" patrols off
the coast of Vietnam back in 1967.
Bob Moore
VP-46
Jim Morris
May 23rd 04, 06:14 PM
Once traded a case of Navy survival knives to an Air Force mess sgt for a
case of steaks for one of our Market time ops. at NAF Naha.
--
jim morris
Bob Moore
May 23rd 04, 08:23 PM
"Jim Morris" > wrote
> Once traded a case of Navy survival knives to an Air Force mess sgt for a
> case of steaks for one of our Market time ops. at NAF Naha.
Jim, I have forgotten Crew 10's ordnance man's name, but he earned his
status on the crew by peeling apples from the box lunches and baking
apple pies from scratch during the market-time patrols. We also had
quite a few on-board prepared beef roasts. All told, Vietnam could
have been a lot worse experience. :-)
Bob Moore
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