Posted on 01/27/2011 6:21:50 AM PST by epithermal
Hey, if it were counterweighted properly, it'd have a chance.
In the early days of fixed-wing aviation, they did experiment with a single-bladed propellor (properly counterweighted of course).
I assure you it is WOP WOP WOP WOP WOP!, no need to think it.
As a kid, I lived right next to the parade field at Rucker during the height of pilot training for Vietnam. Classes flew over constantly, either practicing formation flying for graduation, or actually graduating. We’re talking 70-100 ship formations here. There were always helicopters overhead, in general.
It has been a long time, but you don’t forget that sound.
A Huey was sent to the field to pick me up..take me to Chu Chi..drop me at the 25th Division HQ. The Red Cross sent it..to my dismay a civilian was waiting. He took me to their office where I had to sit down and write a letter to my mother. Could not leave until it was finished.
She contacted the Red Cross because I was not answering her letters.
Had to find my own own back to the field. Was a 19 yo Sergeant 11E40, tank commander...in the 3/4 Cav.
That was funny,my mom did the same thing..contacted Red Cross.You know how it was,wore out,couldn`t tell what day of the week it was.ya mean to write first thing in the am
I just got called into the CO`s office to get a chewing out
You guys in those those big tanks were like supermen to me
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.
Lest we forget. Absent Comrades.
More ignorant tripe. DUSTOFF was the callsign for Maj. Charles Kelly, originally by his unit 57th Air Evac, later used by all Medevac flights after Maj Kelly's death. Major Kelly set the example.
Major Charles L. Kelly was DUSTOFF and DUSTOFF was "Combat Kelly." The two became synonymous in Vietnam in 1964. As commander of the 57th Medical Detachment (Helicopter Ambulance), Kelly assumed the call sign "DUSTOFF." His skill, aplomb, dedication, and daring soon made both famous throughout the Delta. The silence of many an outpost was broken by his radio draw, "...this is DUSTOFF. Just checking in to see if everything is okay." And when there were wounded, in came Kelly "hell-bent for leather!" On 1 July 1964 Kelly approached a hot area to pick up wounded only to find the enemy waiting with a withering barrage of fire. Advised repeatedly to withdraw, he calmly replied to the ground element's advisor, "When I have your wounded." Moments later, he was killed by a single bullet. Kelly was dead but his "DUSTOFF" became the call sign for all aeromedical missions in Vietnam. "When I have your wounded" became the personal and collective credo of the gallant DUSTOFF pilots who followed him. Major Charles L. Kelly was inducted into the DUSTOFF Hall of Fame on 17 February 2001.
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