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#1
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Doug- What's wrong with 200 feet? BRBR
Welll, been a while since I've been in and I have been known to fly less than 500 ft AGL on occasion but isn't the OPNAV min for non combat ops 500 feet?? Was when I was flyin'...Lower for the A-G guys that completed a 'step down' program?? This was a F-14, VF-213... P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
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#3
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Woody,
Back in the day when I flew VA (the REAL Medium Attack kind--not that Corsair stuff), our SOP called for a 200 FT AGL minalt that we flew at very regularly--500 FT AGL night/IMC. My recollection as well, from the early 1970s. Not sure, but I THINK that on the OB-16 route (Eastern Oregon canyons) A-6s were authorized lower than 500 AGL at night if the system was tight and the crew felt OK about things. Owl sends. -- Mike Kanze 436 Greenbrier Road Half Moon Bay, California 94019-2259 USA 650-726-7890 "When was the last time in world history in which 'suicide' and 'martyrdom' were the code of enlightened action admired by any society?" - Roy Fassel (WALL STREET JOURNAL, 10/27/03) "Doug "Woody" and Erin Beal" wrote in message ... On 11/2/03 9:56 AM, in article , "Pechs1" wrote: [rest snipped] |
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"Pechs1" wrote in message
... rmoore- Flying at 200 feet we did 90-degree turns at 550 mph BRBR Oopps. I'm sure he meant 500 feet.... I've done more than a couple of TARPS hops when some legs of the mission were down at 200 ft AGL. My first flight with Hunyack on the boat was the standard Hunyack-1 arrival. At about 50 miles out, we descended down to 200 ft over the water then he pushed it down to about 50 feet at about 550 knots. That's how we came into the break. If it were anybody else, CAG would have pitched him off the fantail afterwards, but because it was Hunyack, nothing of consequence (that a lowly LTJG would know about) ever happened. __!_!__ Gizmo |
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If it were anybody else, CAG wouldhave pitched him off the fantail
afterwards, but because it was Hunyack,nothing of consequence (that a lowly LTJG would know about) ever happened Why the special dispensation? |
#6
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"JamesF1110" wrote in message
... If it were anybody else, CAG wouldhave pitched him off the fantail afterwards, but because it was Hunyack,nothing of consequence (that a lowly LTJG would know about) ever happened Why the special dispensation? I have no idea other than the fact that he was a helluva stick. Not very smart and certainly not a great administrator (he left that area up to his XO, J.L. Johnson, who was later CNO), but he was a great pilot. __!_!__ Gizmo |
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On Sat, 01 Nov 2003 02:46:44 GMT, Robert Moore
wrote: Below is an article written by Rick Reilly of Sports Illustrated. He details his experiences when given the opportunity to fly in a F-14 Tomcat. Reminds me of the Jerry Reed F-16 monologue. *********************************************** 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 Anti-spam measures in action. For e-mail response delete "nospam" *********************************************** |
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Hmmm. We usually didn't go below 300 feet in populated areas of the US
- too many phones. But we were going up low-level to Ku-ni range in Korea, out of Kunsan, four in loose tactical, 420 KIAS, when lead said "Go Low!" We all squatted down on the deck and went under a high tension line thatwasn't on our maps - Korean imporvement that hadn't got to our level yet. We did learm to fly very low level there, though. Came in handy flying out of DaNang. When the invasion started in March 72 the monsoon was on - we had to skyspot and loran-drop for a week or so. Then the weather cleared and we went up to hit a barracks complex by Vinh. Out over the water, 420 and 200 ASL, abotu 40 miles out to sea. About halfway up we passed, on the sea side, 5 USN DDs, in line ahead. Each one was flying 2 big US flags - must have been 25 feet long - from the yardarms. I had thought only the RN flew battle flags. Seen against the buildups over the land, bright sun, blue water, the sight really pumped me up! Turning inbound we pushed it up to 500 and let down to 50 ASL. Popped in AB crossing the beach, rolled in at 14,000 for 45 dive with release at 8000. Looked at target, flak looked like the USN in the Battle for Okinawa only viewed from the kamikaze side. I wished I'd figured for a release at 10 but . .. . Eight of us dropped 6 CBU52 apiece and got out of Dodge. We all dodged the golden bbs. The CBUs smothered the complex; never did get any BDA. The DDs were headed back down the coast as we RTB'd. The beautiful sight of those ships has stayed with me all of 30+ years. Walt BJ |
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Thanks, Walt! That was a hell of a visual...
v/r Gordon |
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You're welcome, Gordon. It was comforting knowing the Navy was out
there on our route to and from Pack 1. On a later strike, in April 72, a SeaKing picked up one of my crews just north of the DMZ. We had struck a SA2 site NE of Bat lake and #3 in the first flight got a 37 hit just crossing the beach. They lost an engine, were on fire, made it out over the water, ejected successfully and were in their rafts as we came back out after hitting the site. (We did kill the radar van, the primary target) I went up to 15K and to max endurance as their leader was in a low CAP right over them. I sent my guys off to either find a tanker or get a quick turnaround while RESCAP was paged. Their leader went bingo so I descended slowly while waiting for a pickup. The two guys in their rafts - Charlie Hall and Lee Bohner - were chatting back and forth on their survival radios - sounded cool, like they were floating around off Miami Beach! About then a real big camouflaged helicopter came in from the north. I was on a high downwnd taking a real good look at him while resetting the sight to 38 mils for strafe (F4E - with a gun!) But it turned out to be a CH53 USN type in sand and green splotch camo - had never seen one like that before, and at first I had thought it was one of the big USSR ones. Just then a USN Seaking (white and orange!) showed up - he'd been on a mail run around the ships out there and heard the beeper and then saw the smoke from the F4. They picked up my crew and dropped them off in our area at Danang about 15 minutes after we got back. Found out later Charlie was shelling them with 122mm guns during the pickup! Great service - too bad the Seaking crew couldn't stay the night, though. Walt BJ |
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