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![]() Hi Ed Dick flew F-100F's as a Misty FAC. His callsign was 'Misty 40'. Dick flew 105 missions in country. Cheers...Chris P.S. I asked you along time ago if you had ever run across Ray Huot. Ray was my old squadron commander. He was also DCANR at the same time. |
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av8r wrote:
Hi Ed Dick flew F-100F's as a Misty FAC. His callsign was 'Misty 40'. Dick flew 105 missions in country. Cheers...Chris P.S. I asked you along time ago if you had ever run across Ray Huot. Ray was my old squadron commander. He was also DCANR at the same time. Sorry if I didn't respond previously. No, never ran across Ray. DCANR--would that have been during the F-105 period? Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (ret) ***"When Thunder Rolled: *** An F-105 Pilot Over N. Vietnam" *** from Smithsonian Books ISBN: 1588341038 |
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Hi Ed
Here's a brief outline pertaining to Ray's career with the F-105 and when he was the Deputy Commander of the Canadian NORAD Region here at 22 Wing, North Bay. Cheers...Chris PAO 722nd SUS June 1968 - March 1969, student, F-105 combat crew training, McConnell Air Force Base, Kansas. March 1969 - July 1970, F-105 fighter pilot, 12th Tactical Fighter Squadron, Kadena Air Base, Japan July 1970 - October 1970, F-105 fighter pilot, Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand October 1970 - April 1971, wing air operations staff officer, Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand. Here's an extract from a three part story I wrote about him back in 1993. "In July 1970, General Huot was assigned as a line pilot with the 44th Tactical Fighter squadron, 355th Tactical Fighter Wing at Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base Thailand. There he flew the D model of the F-105. The 44th known as the 'Vampires' had moved northwest from Korat RTAFB the previous October to Takhli, thus consolidating all F-105 operations in Southeast Asia. He mainly flew missions into southern Laos in an area called 'Steel Tiger'. These missions were in direct support of the war in South Viet Nam, intended to interdict North Vietnamese traffic along segments of the communists' major supply artery, known as the infamous 'Ho Chi Minh Trail'. This portion of the trail ran along the Laotian panhandle from Mu Gia Pass to the border with Cambodia. The weather made flying quite a challenge. On a hot and humid day, with a full combat load of 14,00 pounds, you could expect to use damn near the whole ten thousand feet of available runway. Around the eight thousand foot marker, with all three gear still on the runway, the pucker factor would start to take effect. Once airborne, you'd climb straight out until you burned off some fuel. The thunderstorms in that area are very fierce. Cumulus clouds with tops of 60,00 feet were common sight. The rain comes down so hard that it literally takes your breath away. During late 1970 with President Richard Nixon's' Vietnamization program well underway, the Air Force de-activated the 355th TFW. In October 1970, General Huot said good-bye to Takhli, albeit temporarily and returned an F-105 stateside. In short order he was back to the 'Kingdom of Siam' as Thailand was now known as. His new assignment was as Wing Air Operations Staff Officer at Nakhon Phanom R.T.A.F.B. Nakhon Phanom was affectionately referred to as simply 'NKP' or 'Naked Phanny'. General Huot spent the next five months forward air controlling with 'Task Force Alpha' . This was an infiltration surveillance center to which was transmitted 'Igloo White' data'. Igloo White was a surveillance system consisting of hand implanted or air delivered electronic sensors that blanketed the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Their job was to transmit enemy movement information through a relay aircraft back to the center. The system although somewhat flawed, did nurture some outstanding results, particularly in vehicle movements. When a North Vietnamese convoy was pinpointed, strike aircraft including the Air Forces' F-4 Phantoms, Navy and Marine A-6 Intruders under of the direction of General (Captain at the time) Huot, would pulverize the enemy into oblivion. He recalled the great feeling he got when they were able to knock the hell out of a convoy that was vital carrying war material south. General Huot flew the Wing's two types of FAC (Forward Air Control) aircraft; the Rockwell OV-10A Bronco and Cessna 0-2A checking on the sensors and to gather intelligence for future target acquisitions. In April of 1971 General Huot departed Thailand for the last time." September 1993 - May 1995, Deputy Commander, Canadian North American Aerospace Defense Region, North American Aerospace Command, North Bay, Ontario, Canada. He was also the Commanding Officer of my unit, the 722nd Support Squadron. It was a dual role for all USAF 07's assigned here as DCANR . When the Canadian Air Force's Fighter Group disbanded in 1997, the position of Deputy Commander of the Canadian NORAD Region relocated to Winnipeg with the newly formed 1 Canadian Air Division (now called 1 CAD/CANR) My squadron maintains an OLA at Winnipeg. The current commander of the 722nd SUS is an 05. |
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av8r wrote:
Hi Ed Here's a brief outline pertaining to Ray's career with the F-105 and when he was the Deputy Commander of the Canadian NORAD Region here at 22 Wing, North Bay. Cheers...Chris PAO 722nd SUS Never encountered him, but I was at ATC Hq when he graduated from pilot training and got his F-105 assignment. I was the OIC of the Student Rated Assigment section of ATC Personnel, so I originated the orders that sent him off to 105 training. Here's a full bio of Lt. Gen Huot: http://www.af.mil/bios/bio_5890.shtml Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (ret) ***"When Thunder Rolled: *** An F-105 Pilot Over N. Vietnam" *** from Smithsonian Books ISBN: 1588341038 |
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