![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Reading 'Over the Beach',
Questions- -How many pilots did they deploy with? They had a det in Cubi and 10 jets... -Seems like a pretty unhappy group. Dept heads that were either labeled as effeminate or cowards, JOs that got short and yelled at the CO, a JO that turned his wings in cuz he didn't agree with the war, A CO that wasn't very well liked, a former CO that was committed to a looney bin... I know it was over a long period of time and also during combat, which can bring out the best and worse of people but it seems like a not very cohesive group... Anybody have an insight? Masher?? P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Pechs1" wrote in message ... Reading 'Over the Beach', Questions- -How many pilots did they deploy with? They had a det in Cubi and 10 jets... -Seems like a pretty unhappy group. Dept heads that were either labeled as effeminate or cowards, JOs that got short and yelled at the CO, a JO that turned his wings in cuz he didn't agree with the war, A CO that wasn't very well liked, a former CO that was committed to a looney bin... I know it was over a long period of time and also during combat, which can bring out the best and worse of people but it seems like a not very cohesive group... Anybody have an insight? Masher?? P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer I guess I had met and knew all of them, before they made their first cruise on the big "O". They were a good group of very skilled fighter pilots. Real good, I had flown with many of them in the early 60's and flew a lot of hours against all of them during their pre-deployment work-up. Belly "B" (the former CO) was a wild man, but one of the best sticks I ever flew with. Even in the early '60's he was considered "old School", a throw back to the old days. His way wasn't the way to get ahead in the Navy. He was a leader, not a manage, had few social graces, was probably an alcoholic, and was definitely out of place in the peacetime Navy. But while I was around him he was able to maintain control of himself. (I understand that later on this was not always the case). I learned a whole lot, (good and bad) from him in a very short time, during my nugget days. There wasn't a lot of time to learn anything during the Cuban Missile Crisis, but Belly and a couple of others taught me enough, so that I might have had a chance if we had gone up against Cuban MiG-21's. ACM was the way of life in F-8' s in those days. I guess if I admitted it Belly was the one that taught me the correct way to make a vertical pass on a bomber. (A.K.A. thumping). Most VF (F-8) squadrons at that time, deployed to SE Asia with 19 pilots. They usually had a few aircraft at Cubi, in maintenance, with one pilot (MaintO or one of the AsstMaintO). While on station, who ever needed or earned a brake would ferry an aircraft back to cubi, spend a few days and fly the replacement back. Plus the fighter squadrons had its choice of the other aviators on the Wing staff, Carrier Group staff and ships company. That meant that there were probably 23 or 24 total that flew with regularly. (Although staff and ships company usually got stuck with fleet BARCAP or the less desirable missions such as checking out the sampans). I would say on their first deployment there were predominately two types in the squadron. One were the guys that all they wanted to do was fly and nothing else. The other were the ones that had careers. (This is not to say that some of the ones with careers weren't warriors, some were). On the first cruise they were tight, later on I understand the two groups split almost into open warfare. I can't really say anything first hand, as I was flying RF-8's then and only spoke to them in passing so to say. But they didn't call the Wing "Bloody 16" for no reason at all. They were all under a lot of stress, and it wasn't due to bad luck, but they had a lot of losses. They went through some sh*t. I don't remember the numbers, but just about every aircraft on the ship had been replaced once, and many had been replaced two or three times. They had the highest losses of anyone in Vietnam. IIRC VF-162 went through 15 aircraft, and brought back none of the original ones, I believe they deployed with 14. The A-4 loses were even higher, and I believe one squadron had 24 or 25 aircraft lost. The accounts I got from friends about wings being turned in, was that it definitely wasn't because he was scared or a coward. This was not the case of several others (none in VF-162) that managed to leave the Navy, "because they owed it to their families, to have a career with the airlines". Of course this is all my opinion, and my reputation was such that I never had to worry about getting a flag, (unless it was on my coffin) even if I had been able to stay in the Navy. -- Red |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Red- Of course this is all my opinion, and my reputation was such that I
never had to worry about getting a flag, (unless it was on my coffin) even if I had been able to stay in the Navy. BRBR Thanks, exactly what I was looking for. I missed being in combat in every squadron I was in. Wings in 1974, second CV 'there' for the Mayaguez(sp?), Acciile Lauro(sp/ again), 'second' CV for Libya and Lebanon strikes. Trained to 'kill people and break things' but my year group was unique in that most saw no combat(YG 73). Didn't want to get killed or I didn't lust after combat but I would have liked to experience it, at least once. I saw a sliver of it when I was a middie, onboard Kitty hawk in summer of 1972, Yankee station, sort of attached to VA-52. Flew a couple of tanker missions over the North, until CO of the CVA found out and stopped it. I could feel the tension among the A-6 guys. One Mid 'almost' flew a backseat barcap mssion in a F-4 with VF-114..almost. Saw/felt it again when in Cubi, when Midway, Hancock were both there...O club was amazing..... Almost got my lights punched out when a A-6 guy told me to go over to some guy at the bar and say' F-8 pilots eat flowers'. Of course he was a F-8 pilot. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I made a cruise On Yorktown CV-10 . Late 64 and up till june 65 . A
cruise was still 9 months then . I believe we had 5 Skyhawks on board . Most of the Nam cost time was S2 F,s doing surveillance flights along the coast . But our Sky Hawks flew missions into Nam . Left with ordanance and came home empty . I was a bridge watch stander , Helmsman So I had a good view of the Flt Deck . So , Am I right , We had carrier ops as early as , Early 65 ?? Or Earlier ??? |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "T Bird" wrote in message ... I made a cruise On Yorktown CV-10 . Late 64 and up till june 65 . A cruise was still 9 months then . I believe we had 5 Skyhawks on board . Most of the Nam cost time was S2 F,s doing surveillance flights along the coast . But our Sky Hawks flew missions into Nam . Left with ordanance and came home empty . I was a bridge watch stander , Helmsman So I had a good view of the Flt Deck . So , Am I right , We had carrier ops as early as , Early 65 ?? Or Earlier ??? I don't know if the dates are that big a secret anymore or not. Probably not as every reporter knew about it anyway, but we started flying recon "Yankee Team"(May 64) with RF-8's and Air Force RF-101's into Laos, which was three months before the Tonkin Gulf Incident (Aug 64). After a couple of RF-8's received ground fire, flew into mountains, and other things, they started having a F-8 fly escort for them, but that was just so they knew why the RF-8 didn't come back. The first RF-8 was lost on 6 June 1964, easy day to remember as it was the anniversary of "D-Day". I am having a senior moment and I can't recall the pilots name. He was captured and escaped from the Pathat (sp?) Lao, and later rescued. I believe he and Diter Dingler an A-1 pilot were the only two Naval Aviators to escape and be rescued during the whole SE Asia War Game. At that time it wasn't very likely they were going to recover any pilots from Laos. Good SAR in that area had to wait for the Air Force to put bases in Thailand and secret forward SAR bases in Cambodia and Laos. The route was through the northern part of South Vietnam, the north into Laos (Plain of Jars mainly), and return the same way. A big "L" or sometimes a big "U". Due to the fuel situations etc., more than one mission cut the corners and returned to the boat via North Vietnam, but officially it was never noticed, and I don't remember Ho Chi Mien saying anything about it either, but he had to know. After Aug 64 flight plans were straight over North Vietnam, and a month or so later air strikes were started into Laos. Then things got serious! |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Red Rider wrote:
snip I don't know if the dates are that big a secret anymore or not. Probably not as every reporter knew about it anyway, but we started flying recon "Yankee Team"(May 64) with RF-8's and Air Force RF-101's into Laos, which was three months before the Tonkin Gulf Incident (Aug 64). After a couple of RF-8's received ground fire, flew into mountains, and other things, they started having a F-8 fly escort for them, but that was just so they knew why the RF-8 didn't come back. The first RF-8 was lost on 6 June 1964, easy day to remember as it was the anniversary of "D-Day". I am having a senior moment and I can't recall the pilots name. Chuck Klusmann. snip Guy |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Pechs1" wrote in message ... Red- Of course this is all my opinion, and my reputation was such that I never had to worry about getting a flag, (unless it was on my coffin) even if I had been able to stay in the Navy. BRBR Thanks, exactly what I was looking for. I missed being in combat in every squadron I was in. Wings in 1974, second CV 'there' for the Mayaguez(sp?), Acciile Lauro(sp/ again), 'second' CV for Libya and Lebanon strikes. Trained to 'kill people and break things' but my year group was unique in that most saw no combat(YG 73). Didn't want to get killed or I didn't lust after combat but I would have liked to experience it, at least once. I saw a sliver of it when I was a middie, onboard Kitty hawk in summer of 1972, Yankee station, sort of attached to VA-52. Flew a couple of tanker missions over the North, until CO of the CVA found out and stopped it. I could feel the tension among the A-6 guys. One Mid 'almost' flew a backseat barcap mssion in a F-4 with VF-114..almost. Saw/felt it again when in Cubi, when Midway, Hancock were both there...O club was amazing..... Almost got my lights punched out when a A-6 guy told me to go over to some guy at the bar and say' F-8 pilots eat flowers'. Of course he was a F-8 pilot. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer Yeah I remember you youngsters on your 72 summer cruise. We were just getting back to WestPAC with new Aircraft, to replace our old worn out birds, when they were kicking you off the ships. Also the first EA-6B's were arriving too. By the way didn't you know never to trust an attack pilot. -- Red |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
" Yeah I remember you youngsters on your 72 summer cruise. We were just
getting back to WestPAC with new Aircraft, to replace our old worn out birds, when they were kicking you off the ships. Also the first EA-6B's were arriving too. By the way didn't you know never to trust an attack pilot. Red, What Carrier were you on in '72? I was on America with VF-74 as an ECM tech. Pechs, I had friends on the Kitty. Even visited a few times wile in Subic. Jim |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Red- By the way didn't you know never to trust an attack pilot. BRBR
Learned that........ P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Red,
Great post! Having a taste of flying in hostile air in DS I think the feelings must be the same across time. Combat was a defining point in my life. very glad I did it but not something I want to do again. I didn't quite understand the quote below are you saying they left for the political disagreements with the US policy in SEA or to save their skin.? The accounts I got from friends about wings being turned in, was that it definitely wasn't because he was scared or a coward. This was not the case of several others (none in VF-162) that managed to leave the Navy, "because they owed it to their families, to have a career with the airlines". I was told that one CO from another squadron on another boat stood up on the eve of DS and said that he was destined to lead men into combat! I would have slugged him if I had been there. Knowing the guy I can belive he said it. Sparky |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Swift Boat Veterans For Truth: Are They Going To Sink John Kerry? | BUFDRVR | Military Aviation | 151 | September 12th 04 09:59 PM |
Lot of noise being made about Purple Hearts | Jack | Military Aviation | 154 | September 8th 04 07:24 PM |
Instructors: is no combat better? | ArtKramr | Military Aviation | 103 | March 13th 04 09:07 PM |
THOMAS MOORER, EX-JOINT CHIEFS CHAIR DIES | Ewe n0 who | Military Aviation | 2 | February 12th 04 12:52 AM |
What about the AIM-54 Pheonix Missile? | Flub | Military Aviation | 26 | October 5th 03 05:34 AM |