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#11
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![]() "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... Well, maybe to count as a death in Vietnam combat you actually had to get there first! I know that's a nit-pick, but it is certainly a consideration. I'm pretty sure that the account is a first-person perspective from Dick. He was a Misty and was certainly there at the time. Will have to ask him next year at River Rats--he's a regular attendee. As is Don Hartnett who was on one of those BUFFs, survived the mid-air and was rescued by an SA-16 from the S. China Sea, only to have the Albatross crash on takeoff, requiring another rescue. Don survived that one as well and then went on to become an F-105 Wild Weasel Bear. Gotta say he's a glutton for punishment. He makes it to the reunion every year. Ed Rasimus Ed, It's Don Harten (Kenneth D.) and I was at Takhli with him where he was an F-105 strike pilot. Later he went back to Takhli as a pilot in F-111s. I'm sure Dick, whom I met why he was planning the Voyager project, wrote the account (It is also in "Misty") not knowing about the earlier death. It just bothered me that it wasn't true. I admire both Dick and Don. Regards, Tex Houston |
#12
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![]() Ed Rasimus wrote: On Fri, 28 Jul 2006 15:53:39 GMT, Ed Rasimus wrote: As is Don Hartnett who was on one of those BUFFs, Harten. That was Don Harten. They say the memory is the second thing to go...forgot what's first. Ed Rasimus IIRC forgetfulness is a good way to not remember things like anniversary's etc. The two accounts emerging about the General's death are different, would the OP's account of D. Rutans statement be a fabrication? I'm a bit confused. Ken Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
#13
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![]() "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in message oups.com... Ed Rasimus wrote: On Fri, 28 Jul 2006 15:53:39 GMT, Ed Rasimus wrote: As is Don Hartnett who was on one of those BUFFs, Harten. That was Don Harten. They say the memory is the second thing to go...forgot what's first. Ed Rasimus IIRC forgetfulness is a good way to not remember things like anniversary's etc. The two accounts emerging about the General's death are different, would the OP's account of D. Rutans statement be a fabrication? I'm a bit confused. Ken Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) Ken, Two different incidents. Notice the difference in names? July 7, 1967 MajGen William J. Crumm (KIA) July 23, 1968 MajGen Robert Worley (KIA) Regards, Tex Houston |
#14
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"W. D. Allen" wrote:
A really compelling story! Could it have been that with fire under the front cockpit deck when the rear seater ejected the airflow around the aft cockpit caused the flames to be sucked up through the front cockpit? WDA That's what it sounds like to me too. This is an interesting story but there's something which I don't follow, perhaps some of you who are more familiar with fighters could comment. This following quote doesn't make sense to me: My God ! " I screamed. " What doesn't he eject ? How can he just sit there? What in the hell is wrong? Then I figured it out. It became obvious that we were too far away ( route formation ) and he couldn't hear me. So I drove the Hun right up next to the burning cockpit and continue calling, " Strobe 01 ! Bail out ! BAIL OUT ! " this time with more desperation in my screams. Harland calls, " Oh my God ! Look at it burn ! " In desperation, I drive closer, so close that the air pressure between the two aircraft causes the fiery ball to roll into a 30 degree bank, turning toward the right. As I pulled away, he rolled back wings level, now pointed directly at the beach in a slightly steeper descent. While I know very little about fighter a/c I know a lot about VHF/UHF radios used in aircraft and I cannot imagine how this could happen... -- -Gord. (use gordon in email) |
#15
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In article ,
Gord Beaman wrote: "W. D. Allen" wrote: A really compelling story! Could it have been that with fire under the front cockpit deck when the rear seater ejected the airflow around the aft cockpit caused the flames to be sucked up through the front cockpit? WDA That's what it sounds like to me too. This is an interesting story but there's something which I don't follow, perhaps some of you who are more familiar with fighters could comment. This following quote doesn't make sense to me: My God ! " I screamed. " What doesn't he eject ? How can he just sit there? What in the hell is wrong? Then I figured it out. It became obvious that we were too far away ( route formation ) and he couldn't hear me. So I drove the Hun right up next to the burning cockpit and continue calling, " Strobe 01 ! Bail out ! BAIL OUT ! " this time with more desperation in my screams. Harland calls, " Oh my God ! Look at it burn ! " In desperation, I drive closer, so close that the air pressure between the two aircraft causes the fiery ball to roll into a 30 degree bank, turning toward the right. As I pulled away, he rolled back wings level, now pointed directly at the beach in a slightly steeper descent. While I know very little about fighter a/c I know a lot about VHF/UHF radios used in aircraft and I cannot imagine how this could happen... If you mean the statement: "were too far away (route formation) and he couldn't hear me." I understood that as just what he was thinking at the time under the pressure of the incident. I was once responding to an aircraft that had spun in and was burning. The ground controller kept saying to the responding crash unit, "Hurry Ramp Captain, hurry!" even though all of us were going as fast as we reasonably could. It was probably very frustrating to watch what you know is someones death and be powerless to do anything about it. |
#16
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Dale wrote:
In article , Gord Beaman wrote: "W. D. Allen" wrote: A really compelling story! Could it have been that with fire under the front cockpit deck when the rear seater ejected the airflow around the aft cockpit caused the flames to be sucked up through the front cockpit? WDA That's what it sounds like to me too. This is an interesting story but there's something which I don't follow, perhaps some of you who are more familiar with fighters could comment. This following quote doesn't make sense to me: My God ! " I screamed. " What doesn't he eject ? How can he just sit there? What in the hell is wrong? Then I figured it out. It became obvious that we were too far away ( route formation ) and he couldn't hear me. So I drove the Hun right up next to the burning cockpit and continue calling, " Strobe 01 ! Bail out ! BAIL OUT ! " this time with more desperation in my screams. Harland calls, " Oh my God ! Look at it burn ! " In desperation, I drive closer, so close that the air pressure between the two aircraft causes the fiery ball to roll into a 30 degree bank, turning toward the right. As I pulled away, he rolled back wings level, now pointed directly at the beach in a slightly steeper descent. While I know very little about fighter a/c I know a lot about VHF/UHF radios used in aircraft and I cannot imagine how this could happen... If you mean the statement: "were too far away (route formation) and he couldn't hear me." I understood that as just what he was thinking at the time under the pressure of the incident. I was once responding to an aircraft that had spun in and was burning. The ground controller kept saying to the responding crash unit, "Hurry Ramp Captain, hurry!" even though all of us were going as fast as we reasonably could. It was probably very frustrating to watch what you know is someones death and be powerless to do anything about it. Yes, I guess stress can do strange things to a person's common sense. -- -Gord. (use gordon in email) |
#17
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On Fri, 28 Jul 2006 11:21:07 -0600, "Tex Houston"
wrote: I'm sure Dick, whom I met why he was planning the Voyager project, wrote the account (It is also in "Misty") not knowing about the earlier death. It just bothered me that it wasn't true. I admire both Dick and Don. It is also in "Bury Us Upside Down", the new book by Don Sheppard and Rick Newman. The RF-4C callsign is Strobe 10 in that version. There is no mention of it being the only/first General to die in Vietnam. --Rolf |
#18
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Gord Beaman wrote in
: "W. D. Allen" wrote: A really compelling story! Could it have been that with fire under the front cockpit deck when the rear seater ejected the airflow around the aft cockpit caused the flames to be sucked up through the front cockpit? WDA That's what it sounds like to me too. This is an interesting story but there's something which I don't follow, perhaps some of you who are more familiar with fighters could comment. This following quote doesn't make sense to me: My God ! " I screamed. " What doesn't he eject ? How can he just sit there? What in the hell is wrong? Then I figured it out. It became obvious that we were too far away ( route formation ) and he couldn't hear me. So I drove the Hun right up next to the burning cockpit and continue calling, " Strobe 01 ! Bail out ! BAIL OUT ! " this time with more desperation in my screams. Harland calls, " Oh my God ! Look at it burn ! " In desperation, I drive closer, so close that the air pressure between the two aircraft causes the fiery ball to roll into a 30 degree bank, turning toward the right. As I pulled away, he rolled back wings level, now pointed directly at the beach in a slightly steeper descent. While I know very little about fighter a/c I know a lot about VHF/UHF radios used in aircraft and I cannot imagine how this could happen... Distance means little when there is no radio to receive what is being transmitted. The UHF radio in the F-4 resided under the back seat, requiring removal of the seat bucket (and included rocket motor) for maintenance, making it a huge PITA for the tweets and AMEs. Ejection essentially kills the radio. Dave in San Diego AT1 USN (Ret) Got to help change a radio one day |
#19
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![]() "588" wrote in message .com... W. D. Allen wrote: A really compelling story! Could it have been that with fire under the front cockpit deck when the rear seater ejected the airflow around the aft cockpit caused the flames to be sucked up through the front cockpit? Clearly so. A fighter-pilot General he may have been and a significant loss to that community, but it is worth noting that respect for the Company-grade basics may have brought him home with his back-seater instead of incinerating him where he sat. In the cockpit, a little more thought about what fire does can be far more useful than all the nicer aspects of Generalship. I wish I had a copy of Dick Rutan's original unedited tape. ; Jack why would a "fighter pilot General" be debating a point that was (in terms of task prioritization) largely ridiculously irrelevant, given the situation at hand ? "He said the General did not want to eject and argued about the position of the command ejection handle in the rear cockpit. The Major, upholding his duties, wanted it in the Command position ( the guy in back Command ejects the front.) But the General outranked him and ordered him to leave it in the OFF position, thereby making each seat a single-initiated ejection". |
#20
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Moe wrote:
But the General outranked him and ordered him to leave it in the OFF position, thereby making each seat a single-initiated ejection". So, in a debate regarding flight safety, who is supposed to have the last word, the PIC or the ranking officer? -- St. John There is no satisfaction in hanging a man who does not object to it -G. B. Shaw |
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