Posted on 01/27/2011 6:21:50 AM PST by epithermal
LOL
Another aviation/military article written by a real (/sarcasm) enthusiast. Boy these journalism schools really teach ‘em how to do good research!
to wit: “ the Army is retiring the few single-bladed UH-1 variants ...”
single-BLADED !!!! ROFL
Watch one of those flop around.
Try single-ROTOR. Two blades; one rotor.
Well you could choose to critique the author. Or you could comment on the service the UH-1 has provided or the guys who flew it.
You’ve got it all wrong. These were the early ones with the oars out the sides.
Sad to see it fly off into history. I miss the plop plop plop sound. Hated to see the Garrand go too, but the new stuff is much better so they tell me. Nostalgia, isn’t wonderful?
Nostalgia, isnt “IT” wonderful? ............ typo
Salute to "Snake" Crandall.
Thinking about it now it seems like it was in another life.
Really? Cool! I want one.
Better reporting here:
Saying goodbye to iconic ‘Huey’
Military: Ceremony for workhorse of Vietnam War
ADAM ASHTON; Staff writer
Last updated: January 26th, 2011 06:40 AM (PST)
It’s not enough for retired Lt. Col. Bruce Crandall to wave goodbye to the Army]s last UH-1 helicopter flying on the West Coast.
Crandall, 77, wants to take the controls of the Huey himself.
I would fly it tomorrow, said Crandall, a Medal of Honor recipient from Port Orchard. If I can, Ill be in the cockpit.
Hes the guest of honor at the Yakima Training Center today, where the Army Air Ambulance Detachment plans to mothball its last Huey.
The iconic Vietnam-era chopper was still in use for medical evacuations at the Yakima grounds through September. Its been replaced by new models of the UH-72 Lakota, a quick helicopter designed for medical missions.
The Hueys departure marks the passing of an era to Crandall and other Vietnam veterans who remember the whoop whoop of its blades gliding into combat zones.
Youll never see a movie about Vietnam without some helicopters flying around and theyll all be Hueys, said retired Col. Philip E. Courts, 72, of DuPont.
Courts career spanned the Hueys heyday. It was first produced in 1959, and Courts was an instructor pilot in the early 1960s teaching others how to fly the chopper. At the time, it represented a considerable improvement in power and speed. Courts was eager to fly the Huey instead of its cumbersome predecessors.
He served two tours of duty in Vietnam, flying Hueys on medical evacuations and attack runs. The Army sent about 7,000 Hueys to Vietnam; it lost 3,305, according to the Vietnam Helicopter Pilots Association.
Courts went on to command the 9th Aviation Battalion at Fort Lewis. He retired in 1988 with the Blackhawk and Apache established as the Armys primary helicopters.
I know the new equipment is much better, said Courts. Its much more sophisticated and more capable. But I still have a soft spot for the Huey. We could not have done what we did in Vietnam without the Huey.
Courts will be the featured speaker at todays ceremony in Yakima. Hell be joined by his son, Col. Michael Courts, who likewise became an Army helicopter pilot. Michael Courts now is the deputy chief of staff at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.
Crandalls achievements in a Huey are memorialized in print and on film. He commanded a helicopter company during the Nov. 14, 1965 battle at the Ia Drang Valley, the first major battle between American ground forces and the North Vietnamese Army.
Crandall and his wingman, the late Maj. Ed Freeman, made 14 landings under fire and are credited with saving more than 70 soldiers.
Both received the Medal of Honor for their actions at Ia Drang. Theyre memorialized in We Were Soldiers, a 2002 movie starring Mel Gibson that recounts the battle.
Crandall was an adviser to the movie crew. He last flew a Huey while working on the set.
He told Gibson he felt as if hed never stopped flying.
Like riding a bicycle? Gibson asked. More like sex, unless youre really into riding a bicycle, Crandall joked to the actor.
Crandall misses flying, but not only for the adrenaline.
It meant that theres a lot of people living today that wouldnt be here grandchildren and some great grandchildren because that helicopter performed. It brought home a lot of my friends, he said.
Adam Ashton: 253-597-8646 adam.ashton@thenewstribune.com
The soundS of Hueys are vivd in the memories my childhood.
Goodbye old bird...
I was never in the service but scored marksmanship and sniper scores with the Garand as Sheriff Explorer, when I was 14.
I loved that gun and now have two M1A Springfield’s.
I couldn’t sing their praise too much.
My brother who has similar skills swears by his AR. But without his ACOG he can’t compete for grouping @ 100yrds.
Tells me all the time to turn my gun into tinsel and bulbs but I love her the she is and I can reach out and touch someone to about 6 or 700yrds with .308.
Crandall was Rambo’s Colonel...wasn’t he?
This story brought back many memories of riding on the Huey for me..used to take many rides in them hauling radio equipment out to FB`s.
Also that pic with the concertina reminded me of the time I got caught in it hurrying to load a slick at night and getting snagged,took three guys to get me extracated
It was always impressive to see the sky filled with Hueys and that big Chinook hauling artillery underneath
Obviously I made my point the way I wanted to. I intended it as a slam on the quality of, like, gee, totally the diligence and work ethic of modern day journalists reporting on aviation the military topics.
One should not infer any slight to the bird itself or the service it and the men and women who flew it provided.
oops
aviation OR military topics.
my bad.
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