Neat aircraft and great job.

I`ll never forget and proud of those that still serve.

More great pics of a great plane and men that took care of it.
I see they have roofs over the planes now days , we worked in the 120 degree sun.
264 Win Mag wrote:Thanks for your service Pitchy. You served during a time when the military was not as well regarded as it was during most of my time. What unit were you in at Luke? I was in the 311th down at the very end of the flightline by the control tower.
Thomas
When the Weasles came back to the states, they were stationed at George AFB. The darned things needed every inch of runway on hot days, at that Altitude. One didn't make it. The pilot was the squadron commander.jshinal wrote:A shame I can't even see them at the airshows any more. I got to see a pair launch up close many years ago at Seymour Johnson, and they lit the burners simultaneously. Quite a bit of thunder from four afterburners.
The only one I ever liked better was the only F-105 I ever saw - last of the Wild Weasels. It had a 'hard' burner light-off that made a huge bass BANG that reverberated everywhere.
Was a radio change-out in a Phantom as awful as I've heard ? Something about having to pull the seats to get at them ?
I've always been amazed anyone ever thought that technicians264 Win Mag wrote:Pitchy,
I started my career at Luke on F-16's right after the Phantom's had left. I worked on that flightline without shelter for 5 1/2 years and am sure in later years I will have skin cancer from being that close to the sun. All us newbys were told how it was much cooler on the flightline with the F-16's since the exhaust was not pointed down at the ramp like it was with the F-4's. I didn't buy it then and think anybody who works out there now with shelters does not get full credit for working on the flightline in Arizona.
No, individual ejection seats.Was this the craft where the whole cockpit ejected from the aircraft?
Oouch!Pitchy wrote:No, individual ejection seats.Was this the craft where the whole cockpit ejected from the aircraft?
We had a guy eject himself out of a Phantom in a hanger one night, killed him sure enough.
They could fold deflecting air away from the intake if needed.Pitchy, I always wondered why the large panel by the intakes??
Oh right! Is that maybe when going supersonic?Pitchy wrote:They could fold deflecting air away from the intake if needed.Pitchy, I always wondered why the large panel by the intakes??
They put them on there to keep us crew chiefs from climbing in there for a nap, close them at night.Nath wrote:Oh right! Is that maybe when going supersonic?Pitchy wrote:They could fold deflecting air away from the intake if needed.Pitchy, I always wondered why the large panel by the intakes??
N.
Oh, you mean sonic snoringPitchy wrote:They put them on there to keep us crew chiefs from climbing in there for a nap, close them at night.Nath wrote:Oh right! Is that maybe when going supersonic?Pitchy wrote:They could fold deflecting air away from the intake if needed.Pitchy, I always wondered why the large panel by the intakes??
N.![]()
If your asking me 38 years ago is to long to rememberThunder50 wrote:Were the starting cartridges black powder or potassium permanganate (KMnO4)? Think I remember thats what they used on the B-57 and looking at the purple "smoke" on the cartridge start on the B-52 makes me think thats what it was. Was the "smoke" on the F-4 white or purpleish?
I'm just betting you were 11B! Still the mantra at Harmony Church, Ft. Benning in 1986. Thank you all for your service and for those who made the ultimate sacrifice.Dave James wrote:Don't care who fixed them or who flew them , but any one involved with the ZOOMIES!! Never bought a beer in my presence!! They saved my butt more than once
STAY ALERT! STAY ALIVE!
How true. I've often thought this about so many of our servicemen and women. In my dad's case, what enormous responsibilities and accomplishments as a B-__ (you name it) pilot instructor in WWII and command pilot through the early Cold War, then in positions of critical administrative responsibility--in high places--thereafter during periods of unprecedented threat to our country and the free world--very much in the thick of it all. And I look at my life and it seems to pale by comparison, though those more objective have pointed out that I should be very proud of what are amazing accomplisments in their mind. I can vouche that I worked my tail off on hundreds of seemingly (especially now looking back) impossible assignments within my own context...and wonder "how on earth did I do that?!" - frequently running on adrenaline for what seemed to be weeks and months at a time without a break.wecsoger wrote:.
Looking back, yes it was amazing the things we did and the responsibilities. Making sure all the gear worked for the aircrew. Going over each bit of structure work to make sure the aircraft was safe to fly.