New Plane for Gil
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Originally posted by Gil Buettner View PostCan I borrow your credit card for fuel?
It will require heavy maintenance - A/B/C/D Checks before returning to service. Estimated cost to return to service is US$1.3 - $2.5m. Aircraft is being sold As Is, Where Is -
...but imagine taxiing it into the warbird line at OSH! ...or maybe a LAPES down runway 36.Last edited by B.Butler; 01-20-2024, 12:11.
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Originally posted by Ray Tackett View Post
We ride combat load. We doan need no steenkin' seats!
(My last "domestic" flight in VN was combat load in a C-123 with added jet engines.)
We always rigged seats for US troops, but with combat loading (straps across the floor of the cargo compartment) we once had almost 150 Vietnamese refugees in an airplane designed for a maximum of 110 passengers.
This was a flight from DaNang to Pleiku, and right after takeoff we heard the tell-tale intercom message: "Loadmaster's going on oxygen." Someone had vomited, and the rest soon followed.
After we landed and they got off, we called the fire department to come and hose down the inside of the airplane. They refused. "You don't have a fire hazard."
The loadmaster took a can of hydraulic fluid and poked a hole in it with a screwdriver. "Sir, we have a fire hazard." The Army firefighters were not amused, but they did wash out the airplane.
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All the Hercs I saw in VN had four-blade props. The one on sale must be an early one.
On my first ride in a Herc (wilth seats along each side ala C-47s for paratroopers), we were still parked, engines off, when the A/C entered the cabin from the flight deck. He took each man's firearm(s), dropped the clips, locked the actions to the rear, and set the safeties. After he finished with the last man, he turned to us and said, "I've been shot down from the inside -- twice."
One side of the "world's largest" helipad at An Khe was a not-so-long dirt runway. It was at the end of the trip mentioned above. Pilot and plane did their excellent short-field stuff, no problem. Two guys got airsick (groundsick?) between touchdown and stop.Geology rocks, but geography is where it's at.
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