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#2
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"Glenn Alderton" wrote in message
... Interesting, where's the radome ? -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
#3
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"Glenn Alderton" wrote in message
... Interesting, where's the radome ? -- Cheers Dave Kearton |
#4
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This looks like the photo recon version with the zillion candlepower
strobes in the wing tips. Rare bird. The Mohawk had a similar system only the strobe light was under the fuselage. Cheers, Dave |
#5
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This looks like the photo recon version with the zillion candlepower
strobes in the wing tips. Rare bird. The Mohawk had a similar system only the strobe light was under the fuselage. Cheers, Dave |
#6
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CWO4 Dave Mann wrote
This looks like the photo recon version with the zillion candlepower strobes in the wing tips. Rare bird. The Mohawk had a similar system only the strobe light was under the fuselage. Nope! Just the standard 30 million candle power, copilot controlled, searchlight mounted on the starboard side only. It's a standard SP-2H of the RAAF. There is a photo of its sistership number 81 on page 240 of Wayne Mutza's "Lockheed P2V NEPTUNE, An Illustrated History" Bob Moore VP-21, SP-2H, 1959-1962 PanAm (retired) |
#7
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CWO4 Dave Mann wrote
This looks like the photo recon version with the zillion candlepower strobes in the wing tips. Rare bird. The Mohawk had a similar system only the strobe light was under the fuselage. Nope! Just the standard 30 million candle power, copilot controlled, searchlight mounted on the starboard side only. It's a standard SP-2H of the RAAF. There is a photo of its sistership number 81 on page 240 of Wayne Mutza's "Lockheed P2V NEPTUNE, An Illustrated History" Bob Moore VP-21, SP-2H, 1959-1962 PanAm (retired) |
#8
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Bob Moore wrote:
CWO4 Dave Mann wrote This looks like the photo recon version with the zillion candlepower strobes in the wing tips. Rare bird. The Mohawk had a similar system only the strobe light was under the fuselage. Nope! Just the standard 30 million candle power, copilot controlled, searchlight mounted on the starboard side only. It's a standard SP-2H of the RAAF. There is a photo of its sistership number 81 on page 240 of Wayne Mutza's "Lockheed P2V NEPTUNE, An Illustrated History" Bob Moore VP-21, SP-2H, 1959-1962 PanAm (retired) I am wondering if the "flash bulb" P2V was something special cooked up for Vietnam. We had two of them flying out of Da Nang with US Army crews on board. That was from mid-1965 to -mid 1967. The US Air Force really agitated against the Army flying any aircraft over a certain gross weight, capacity, speed, etc. Air Force folks got real nervous when we fielded the OV1D Mohawk with rockets and then gun pods under the wings on the hard points. Made us take off the weapons and have only drop flares on the hard-points. That was the same time as the Caribou controversy and Knock-Down Bitch-Slapping on the Pentagon E-Ring about the Army having "cargo capacity". Our lovely Boo's went away with USAF markings. The Army's SIGINT assets managed to get away with some other platforms, as NSA used their clout. The SIGINT birds flew with Army markings except for the odd C47 with "civilian" registry. The Mohawk flash-bulb was cool since when it flew a mission on a moonless night, the flash made an almost perfectly square illuminated footprint on the ground. It was like the Hand of G-d to the VC I suppose. Only trouble was that the imagery was not real-time and it usually took a 24-hour period to get the B52's overhead and by that time the dinks had moved on to someplace else. Of course they also had the radio relays from their interception sites near Guam which relayed real-time B52 flight information back to the North Vietnam High Command. Cheers, Dave |
#9
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Bob Moore wrote:
CWO4 Dave Mann wrote This looks like the photo recon version with the zillion candlepower strobes in the wing tips. Rare bird. The Mohawk had a similar system only the strobe light was under the fuselage. Nope! Just the standard 30 million candle power, copilot controlled, searchlight mounted on the starboard side only. It's a standard SP-2H of the RAAF. There is a photo of its sistership number 81 on page 240 of Wayne Mutza's "Lockheed P2V NEPTUNE, An Illustrated History" Bob Moore VP-21, SP-2H, 1959-1962 PanAm (retired) I am wondering if the "flash bulb" P2V was something special cooked up for Vietnam. We had two of them flying out of Da Nang with US Army crews on board. That was from mid-1965 to -mid 1967. The US Air Force really agitated against the Army flying any aircraft over a certain gross weight, capacity, speed, etc. Air Force folks got real nervous when we fielded the OV1D Mohawk with rockets and then gun pods under the wings on the hard points. Made us take off the weapons and have only drop flares on the hard-points. That was the same time as the Caribou controversy and Knock-Down Bitch-Slapping on the Pentagon E-Ring about the Army having "cargo capacity". Our lovely Boo's went away with USAF markings. The Army's SIGINT assets managed to get away with some other platforms, as NSA used their clout. The SIGINT birds flew with Army markings except for the odd C47 with "civilian" registry. The Mohawk flash-bulb was cool since when it flew a mission on a moonless night, the flash made an almost perfectly square illuminated footprint on the ground. It was like the Hand of G-d to the VC I suppose. Only trouble was that the imagery was not real-time and it usually took a 24-hour period to get the B52's overhead and by that time the dinks had moved on to someplace else. Of course they also had the radio relays from their interception sites near Guam which relayed real-time B52 flight information back to the North Vietnam High Command. Cheers, Dave |
#10
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CWO4 Dave Mann wrote
I am wondering if the "flash bulb" P2V was something special cooked up for Vietnam. We had two of them flying out of Da Nang with US Army crews on board. That was from mid-1965 to -mid 1967. The US Army operated AP-2E (P2V-5F) ECM aircraft from Cam Rahn Bay (67-72), the Navy operated OP-2E with machine gun pods from Nakhon Phanon, Thailand, and the Navy operated AP-2H armed ECM aircraft along the Ho Chi Minh Trail from 1967 to 1969. Bob Moore |
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