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My five (victories) in the late afternoon and evening of April 6,
1945, was a piece of cake - thanks to good training, equipment, maintenance, wingman and fighter direction ( plus plenty of bogies in the immediate area.) Reiteration of the details would be boring to any of you who have pulled the trigger on six fifties (or four twenties) while looking at a target through a reflector gun sight. So I will tell you about getting aboard the carrier on a dark moonless night . . with the fuel guage way down . . in the ' red zone '. Finding the carrier during the day is fairly routine . . if you've kept your wind vector [and your task group vector ] correctly updated during the four or so hours you have been beyond radar contact. The YEIZB VHF Navigation System usually worked well enough to get you within visual range of the ships if you had the current ' shackle code ' [ written down ] on your knee pad. This night . . in addition to strict radio silence and blackout - my YE/ZB was of no help because my 4 hour ' shackle code ' had expired. At that moment in time I perceived a bunch of phosphorescent wakes perpendicular to my course and it was time for an instantaneous decision: "Turn right" .. OR "Turn left", with not enough fuel to make it ( to the carrier ) if you turned in the wrong direction. I guess you analyze and decide quite quickly when your life is on the string. So I turned left on the hypothesis that the enemy territory of Okinawa was to the right . . and the open sea was to the left. ( So what ?) Because of having some bad experiences with Kamikazes, the carriers were not sticking around too close to land ( so that was my best guess at that moment ). With diminishing low fuel, I picked a large wake in the midst of the many smaller wakes. Almost immediately I saw a tiny blinking red light ahead, and I dropped hook, gear & flaps for a cautious let down. Then I picked up the small hooded deck centerline lights ahead and the LSO's fluorescent signal paddles to the left. At this point, I was now feeling right at home after up to three landings per day at that stage of the Okinawa thing. Bottom line, I was landing on the wrong carrier ( Bennington vs. Hornet ) but that's a 'nother story. My hunt and peck finger is getting tired, so that's all for now. ' Ace In A Day ' Bill Hardy |
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