Home ATV Florida Forum ATV Florida Where to Ride? ATV Florida Links Advertise


Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
 
   Home   Help Search Calendar Login Register  
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: OT...C-130 Story (long but good)  (Read 1464 times)
jackinthebox23
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Location: South Florida

Posts: 188


Life is good.


View Profile

Ignore
« on: January 14, 2005, 05:14:23 PM »

If you have the time, it's worth the read. great writing...


> I am forwarding this to you since it is a good story particularly if you
> lust over mixed metaphors. This is from a colorful writer from the 1st
> Marine Aircraft Wing based at MCAS Miramar, (The guy ought to write for a
> living..... This is my nominee for 'Best of the Month.)
>
>
> There I was at six thousand feet over central Iraq, two hundred eighty
> knots
> and we're dropping faster than Paris Hilton's panties. It's a typical
> September evening in the Persian Gulf; hotter than a rectal thermometer
> and
> I'm sweating like a priest at a Cub Scout meeting.  But that's neither
> here
> nor there. The night is moonless over Baghdad tonight, and blacker than a
> Steven King novel. But it's 2004, folks, and I'm sporting the latest in
> night-combat technology - namely, hand-me-down night vision goggles (NVGs)
> thrown out by the fighter boys.
>
> Additionally, my 1962 Lockheed C-130E Hercules is equipped with an
> obsolete,
> yet, semi-effective missile warning system (MWS).  The MWS conveniently
> makes a nice soothing tone in your headset just before the missile
> explodes
> into your airplane.  Who says you can't polish a turd?  At any rate, the
> NVGs are illuminating Baghdad International Airport like the Las Vegas
> Strip
> during a Mike Tyson fight.  These NVGs are the cat's a**.  But I've
> digressed.
>
> The preferred method of approach tonight is the random shallow. This
> tactical maneuver allows the pilot to ingress the landing zone in an
> unpredictable manner, thus exploiting the supposedly secured perimeter of
> the airfield in an attempt to avoid enemy surface-to-air-missiles and
> small
> arms fire.  Personally, I wouldn't bet my pink a** on that theory but the
> approach is fun as h*ll and that's the real reason we fly it.
>
> We get a visual on the runway at three miles out, drop down to one
> thousand
> feet above the ground, still maintaining two hundred eighty knots. Now the
> fun starts. It's pilot appreciation time as I descend the mighty Herk to
> six
> hundred feet and smoothly, yet very deliberately, yank into a sixty degree
> left bank, turning the aircraft ninety degrees offset from runway heading.
> As soon as we roll out of the turn, I reverse turn to the right a full two
> hundred seventy degrees in order to roll out aligned with the runway. Some
> aeronautical genius coined this maneuver the "Ninety/Two-Seventy."
> Chopping
> the power during the turn, I pull back on the yoke just to the point my
> nether regions start to sag, bleeding off energy in order to configure the
> pig for landing.
>
> "Flaps Fifty!, Landing Gear Down!, Before Landing Checklist!" I look over
> at
> the copilot and he's shaking like a cat pooping on a sheet of ice.
> Looking
> further back at the navigator, and even through the NVGs, I can clearly
> see
> the wet spot spreading around his crotch.  Finally, I glance at my steely
> eyed flight engineer.  His eyebrows rise in unison as a grin forms on his
> face.   I can tell he's thinking the same thing I am.... "Where do we find
> such fine young men?"
>
> "Flaps One Hundred!" I bark at the shaking cat. Now it's all aimpoint and
> airspeed. Aviation 101, with the exception there' are no lights, I'm on
> NVGs, it's Baghdad, and now tracers are starting to crisscross the black
> sky.  Naturally, and not at all surprisingly, I grease the Goodyear's on
> brick-one of runway 33 left, bring the throttles to ground idle and then
> force the props to full reverse pitch. Tonight, the sound of freedom is my
> four Hamilton Standard propellers chewing through the thick, putrid,
> Baghdad
> air. The huge, one hundred thirty-thousand pound, lumbering whisper pig
> comes to a lurching stop in less than two thousand feet. Let's see a Viper
> (F-16) do that!
>
> We exit the runway to a welcoming committee of government issued Army
> grunts. It's time to download their beans and bullets and letters from
> their
> sweethearts, look for war booty, and of course, urinate on Saddam's home.
> Walking down the crew entry steps with my lowest-bidder, Beretta 92F, 9
> millimeter strapped smartly to my side, look around and thank God, not
> Allah, I'm an American and I'm on the winning team. Then I thank God I'm
> not
> in the Army.
>
> Knowing once again I've cheated death, I ask myself, "What in the h*ll am
> I
> doing in this mess?" Is it Duty, Honor, and Country? You bet your a**. Or
> could it possibly be for the glory, the swag, and not to mention, chicks
> dig
> the Air Medal. There's probably some truth there too. But now is not the
> time to derive the complexities of the superior,
> cerebral properties of the human portion of the aviator-man-machine model.
> It is however, time to get out of this hole.  Hey copilot, clean
> yourself up! And how's 'bout the 'Before Starting Engines Checklist."
>
> God, I love this job!"
>
> Semper Fidelis, Gerry
>
>
>
> "Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have made a
> difference in the world. Marines don't have that problem." Ronald Reagan
Logged

2005 Polaris Sportsman 400
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Other Florida sites of interest: www.PinballShark.com

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!