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#11
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VPN- But the brown boots were strictly legal, were they not? Even we cadets
wore brown shoes, in those days. BRBR Well, they wanted me to look the part of USAF IP, black boots, etc. This in the late 70s. So I wore my brown boots, dirty **** cutter or maybe my green one, but too many people called me a USMC pilot with that one. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#12
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Pechs,
Your various observations from your USAF exchange tour reminded me of a visit paid the west coast A-6 community by a couple of Blue Suit 'Vark types during the early 1970s. Since the FB-111A and the A-6A had roughly similar capabilities (night / all-wx full-system attack), we were very interested in what these folks had to say about the 'Vark. What floored many of us though was the near blind faith these two guys had in the reliability of the "Vark's black boxes, especially since the 'Vark of that era was still first generation. This of course was heresy to an A-6A community very used to a less-than-a-hop system reliability and whack-a-mole circuit breaker management. These guys may well have been indulging themselves in a bit of inter-service bravado with their description of the 'Vark's capabilities. However, we got the very distinct impression that they would have unknowingly pranged into the John Day River canyon walls had they been flying a night OB-16 low level mission through eastern Oregon with an errant 'Vark system. -- Mike Kanze "I'm developing an insincere optimism to complement my artificial sense of urgency." - Dilbert, 12/11/03 "Pechs1" wrote in message ... geezzzer- Got any good stories about the AF JOs, jets, upper echelon or rules you'd like to share with us? BRBR Nothing major, Just stood tall before the wing commander for things like rolling up my sleeves, wearing brown boots, flying too close when coming into the overhead.. Many JOs leaving at this time(late 70's) for the airlines. Not a lot of happy campers but really good pilots. I think there was more than a little SAC tainted guys around that saw how wierd SAC was during the SE Asia war games. Plus some O-6s that were transitioning to the F-4 for the first time that were pretty scary. A B-52 suadron CO that was going to an F-4 wing in Germany. How they chose their COs still amazes me. Wing Commander picks his COs. When the Wing Commander is new all sorts of O-5s show up suddenly to rush those jobs. My Ops officer went across the state to a O-2 base to try to get a squadron there, flying Cessna push-pulls, which were all down for shucking their aft prop, taking off the tails... P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#13
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#14
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The Air Force pilot I mentioned wore an Air Force uniform. We also
had one RAF pilot at Pensacola when I went through; he wore an RAF uniform. So I assumed that you would be wearing a Navy uniform while on exchange duty with the Air Force. Shoes included. So I wore my brown boots, dirty **** cutter or maybe my green one, but too many people called me a USMC pilot with that one. Geez, the supreme compliment! vince norris (who is obviously biased) |
#15
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"vincent p. norris" wrote in message
The Air Force pilot I mentioned wore an Air Force uniform. We also had one RAF pilot at Pensacola when I went through; he wore an RAF uniform. So I assumed that you would be wearing a Navy uniform while on exchange duty with the Air Force. Shoes included. We had Canadian exchange officers with us my whole time in VS-27 (we had one, CAG-56 had one). They wore their regular uniforms IAW their rules and we never had a problem. Except once. I was part of det that flew into Rota a day ahead of the boat. Our Canadian was flying one of the other aircraft. We landed, got the aircraft squared away, and were getting into the busses. I standing with a couple of guys from our squadron when our Canadian put on his beret. The Warrant Officer who met us from the NAS took one look at that, got big eyes, and said, "What the Hell are you?" When he found out he was a Canadian he said, "Get that damn hat off and get rid of those Canadian patches! The ONLY non-Spanish military personnel allowd on the base were U.S. If the Spaniards see you they WILL arrest you and they don't like the British or anyone from the Commonwealth." So we quickly surrounded him with a "screen," stripped him of his name tag, VS-880 patch, beret, etc. I gave him my VS-27 ballcap, somebody else came up with a VS-27 patch, and he went sans nametag. When we signed in to the BOQ we signed him in as a LT not a CAPT bid not specify a service. We didn't go out on the town that night, as he would have had to show ID to get back on the base. The next morning we met the first boat at the fleet landing and took him back aboard. After a rather interesting "drill" it was decided to make him (and our other Canadian) "honorary Americans." There were outfitted with U.S. Military IDs, uniform items, told to surrender their other documents (like drivers licenses, etc.), etc. It worked. Nobody got arrested and no international incidents occurred. After we departed they surrendered their "American" identities! :-) I understand that a certain officer on the Admiral's staff had to do a REAL impressive "rug dance" for not knowing of the problem ahead of time. But, since I wasn't there, I can only guess...or speculate...or dream!!!! ;-) Bill Kambic Mangalarga Marchador: Uma raça, uma paixão |
#16
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Vince- So I assumed that you would be wearing a Navy uniform while
on exchange duty with the Air Force. Shoes included. BRBR I wore something other than a flight suit once in 2 years. For the 61st Change of command- P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#17
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Pechs1 wrote:
I wore something other than a flight suit once in 2 years. For the 61st Change of command- So I wonder which type you are- 1) Gets dress uniform dry cleaned and pressed the day after special occasion and hangs it up in closet, protected by garmet bag, ready for the next time OR 2) Checks on uniform hanging closet two days before wearing it, knocks wrinkles out with hands, straightens ribbons and medals, then realizes, "Aw crap, my old rank is still on the sleeve!" ![]() |
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