I was assigned to embassy flights more or less exclusively and met some interesting guys who, it turned out later, were top CIA spooks and who were interested in me for future work. More about this later, for now, I had survived and was pressuring the head shed to get me into something with two engines. They must felt sorry for me, After all, at twenty six, I was their youngest Captain. They assigned me to the C-45 program, the venerable twin beach. I had completed the ground school already in Bangkok, so a quick review and off I went for a few days of flight training and a check ride.
Changing aircraft with Air America wasn’t like the Mel Gibson movie. It took about thirty to sixty days to get checked out in a new piece of equipment and then you were assigned the lowest paying flights until you had some seniority to bid better ones. Luckily, I stayed on the embassy ops, so I was still flying eighty to a hundred hours a month. I didn’t see it then but clearly, someone was pulling strings for me and it had to be the “customer.”
There were five hundred pound eight foot bombs falling from the clouds, being dropped from thirty thousand feet over my head. I was suddenly cold and sweating at the same time- How frightened can you be- I was waiting for one to hit the overhead – it wouldn’t even slow up or go off- just cut us in half and we would fall two miles in pieces.
I understood that somehow we were flying right between the bombers, a turn to the north or south would put us through the falling rows of hell we were unleashing on heads of the poor monkeys and elephants.
In moments it was over and the B-52’s, flying at five hundred mph, were far ahead of us. Louie, let out a very shaky long breath and put his bottle back into the courier pouch. This wasn’t supposed to happen. We were briefed every day on the locations of the artillery and bombing ops. Somehow, they messed up and it was close, as close as it can be!
The C-45, on the ground can be a squirrelly beast, very temperamental and needs a strong minded pilot. You have to make the aircraft do what you want and not what it wants. It will test you every time you give it the chance. Once in the air, the Beech is a true thoroughbred with not a single bad characteristic. She is remarkably stable and will trim up so well you can fly her with your fingers.
Of course, the way we flew them was a little different from what Olive Beach’s genius husband had in mind when he designed it. We flew them into very short PSP (pegged steel plank) greasy and wet bumpy hastily constructed strips. You had to hang them on the props with full flaps and gear and plant them on the first 10’, getting the tail on the ground hard with the stick pulled as far back as you can, steering with brakes, sliding and skidding to a nasty, semi-controlled stop before rolling off into the trees, hills or whatever.
We carried freight of all kinds and all kinds of passengers. Many Vietnamese rode Air America and we never knew who they were- friend or foe. The story was that in the daylight they were all friendly rice pickers but at night, they picked up AK’s and ran all over shooting up round eyes. The village chiefs were supposed to only place friendly types on our flights but, who knows. If you tell a guy that you will chop him up if he doesn’t give you a travel pass- what are you going to do?
CHAPTER 7
THE DC-3
“I came to admire this machine which could lift virtually any load strapped to its back and carry it anywhere in any weather, safely and dependably. The C-47 groaned, it protested, it rattled, it leaked oil, it ran hot, it ran cold, it ran rough, it staggered along on hot days and scared you half to death, its wings flexed and twisted in a horrifying manner, it sank back to earth with a great sigh of relief - but it flew and it flew and it flew.”
— Len Morgan. The C-47 was the U.S. military designation for the DC-3.
Let me try to explain the idea here. The inbound bearing back to the Vung Tau degrees or the exact reciprocal ( 230 -180= 50 & 50 + 180 - 230) The aircraft flies over the station and turns outbound heading 50 degrees and the pilot tries to fly left or right in order to center the aircraft on the published outbound bearing. To do this the pilot sees only the half pointer in the bottom of a clock like round instrument . When he is steering 050 degrees, away from the airport and the half needle on the fixed compass card needle reads 170 degrees, he has to know that he is flying on the forty degree bearing from the station and is then 10 degrees north of the correct course and will have to fly to his right to center on the proscribed bearing as depicted on the published instrument approach.