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***The OFFICIAL aviation pics thread***

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  • CJ
    replied
    that is fucking awesome. Mind blown.

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  • Strychnine
    replied
    Painting, but you get the idea.

    Battle of Lima Site 85







    tl:dr: Biplane(s) shot down with an Ak-47 from a Huey.

    On 12 January 1968, four North Vietnamese Air Force AN-2 Colt biplanes lifted off from an airfield in northeastern North Vietnam and headed west toward Laos. The aircraft were on a mission to destroy a US radar base that was guiding bombers in attacks against targets in North Vietnam. Known to the Americans as Site 85, the radar facility was perched atop a 5,800-foothigh mountain, Phou Pha Thi. Manned by US Air Force volunteers “sheepdipped” as employees of the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, the site had been in operation only a few months. The mountain, used for many years as a staging base for CIA-directed Hmong guerilla fighters and American special operations and rescue helicopters, was only 125 nautical miles from Hanoi. Air America, a CIA-proprietary, provided aerial support for the facility, the technicians, and the security forces.

    The Colts reached Site 85 early in the afternoon, and two began bombing and strafing passes as the others circled nearby. Coincidentally, Air America captain Ted Moore, flying a UH-1D Huey helicopter carrying ammunition to the site, saw the attack (“It looked like World War I,” he recalled.) and gave chase to a Colt as it turned back to the Vietnamese border. Moore positioned his helicopter above the biplane, as crewman Glenn Woods fired an AK-47 rifle down on it. The pursuit continued for more than 20 minutes until the second AN-2 flew underneath the helicopter. Dropping back, Moore and Woods watched as the first AN-2 dropped and crashed into a ridge just west of the North Vietnamese border. Minutes later, the second Colt hit the side of a mountain three miles farther north. The other Colts escaped, inactive observers throughout. Within hours a CIA-controlled ground team reached the crashed aircraft and found bullet holes in the downed planes.

    In the mists of the Annamite Mountains and part of a secret war, Air America employees Ted Moore and Glenn Woods gained the distinction of having shot down a fixed-wing aircraft from a helicopter, a singular aerial victory in the Vietnam War. Two months later, North Vietnamese commandos attacked and destroyed Site 85, inflicting the deadliest single ground loss of US Air Force personnel of the Vietnam War.

    On 27 July 2007, CIA officially received An Air Combat First in an event attended by members of the Air America Board; pilot Ted Moore; Sawang Reed, the wife of flight mechanic Glenn Woods; CIA paramilitary legend Bill Lair; and the donors of the painting, former Air America officers Marius Burke and Boyd D. Mesecher.

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  • David
    replied
    Wrecked more being hauled away.

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  • David
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  • Strychnine
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  • shumpertdavid
    replied
    I love this shot.

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  • Fastback
    replied
    Thought you boys would appreciate a great story

    SR-71 Blackbird Pilot Trolls Arrogant Fighter Pilot

    This may be the single greatest aviation story ever told, it’s about the iconic SR-71 Blackbird whose full operating specs are still classified to this day. The story, from the now out-of-print book Sled Driver by former SR-71 jockey Brian Shul (available used on Amazon for just $700). Here’s the ultimate aviation troll:




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  • GhostTX
    replied
    Great pics, Strychnine!

    RIP to those pour souls caught on film prior to meeting eternity.

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  • RWhite
    replied
    It took some pretty brave cameramen to take a lot of these pictures!

    Great post!

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  • Strychnine
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  • Strychnine
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  • Strychnine
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  • helosailor
    replied
    Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
    This Avenger was badly damaged on a mission to attack Japanese ships in Manila Bay. The gunner, Loyce Dean, was killed and the plane was damaged so badly, that they decided to give him a burial at sea, still strapped into the plane.



    Even though I've attended quite a few burials-at-sea, that one really got to me. That right there is a warriors burial.
    Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
    That's the USS Siboney (CVE-112), a sister ship to the one my Dad was on (USS Mindoro CVE-120). His battle station was the forward quad 40mm mount. He talked often of how much he admired the Avengers and how tough they were.

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  • Strychnine
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  • Strychnine
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