Picture of the day

Gentlemen - a little respect, please for S-Sugar. She's been there and done that. This is quite the read:


Of course!! I was just trying to inject a little humour into the thread. :d

S for Sugar is one of - if not THE - most famous Lancasters ever built. She was a strong bird flown by some good crews and in that particular instance one hell of a skilled pilot.

However, P 0 S is a phrase that was well used, even then, for some military equipments.......
 
Humour gratefully accepted, mate. :)

Back a few posts ago, we were talking about the Lysander. The German functional equivalent was the Henschel HS126:

http://1.bp.########.com/-Ax6qnmsqAGQ/VS09TOleTkI/AAAAAAAARrs/G43ncgQxvJc/s1600/10580953_903326559731697_3909493055841106884_o.jpg

Not nearly so popular or widely employed as the Storch, but still a high-winged liaison kite with sporting pretensions and a serious weakness in any airspace not dominated by friendlies...

6262d6242ee12a55833b135ac6852602.jpg


Hs_126.jpg


f3906e0ba8918477b9b9452125e5674e.jpg
 
There's something about parasol wings that doesn't inspire confidence. Seems a lot of faith to put into a couple of struts and pylons.
 
So... Vietnam was winding down, but there was still a need for a flying machine gun, and the venerable AC-47 "Spooky" airframes (converted from WWII Dakotas) were getting long in the tooth and harder to maintain and keep airborne...

So a few bright minds got together, looked at their inventory of cargo craft, and decided "You know, bet you could fit a mess of guns in the side of a C-119..."

A so was born the AC-119 Shadow/Stinger... Not much to look at, but a sight for sore eyes when she arrived where needed.

View attachment 125975

View attachment 125976

2-ac-119-_lr1.jpg


ac119k-3-cut.jpg


ac119k-1.gif
 
The sort of thing the good folks at Fairchild likely never expected to happen to their aircraft. "They did WHAT?"

Very cool. What an ominous looking bit of kit that is. I know they flew at night and the black paint served a practical purpose, but man, it really couldn't have been any other colour and still do that job.
 
Last edited:
You can really see the evolution toward the AC-130 in the AC-119... More guns (same number of minis, plus a pair of 20mm cannons), more ammo in storage (plus enough floor space for a mess hall), extra sensor bubbles, a proper gunners seat, and he can actually aim the weapons package (unlike the Puff Dragons, which had fixed guns and were aimed via the pilot looking through a reticle in the side window and tilting the aircraft through a slow, and rather predictable, turn).

You really have to wonder what all the lateral stress from the guns firing did to the airframe. I do remember reading about how the AC-130's in Afghanistan/Iraq needing to be rotated out/replaced on a regular basis from getting rattled apart from all the fire missions.
 
You can really see the evolution toward the AC-130 in the AC-119... More guns (same number of minis, plus a pair of 20mm cannons), more ammo in storage (plus enough floor space for a mess hall), extra sensor bubbles, a proper gunners seat, and he can actually aim the weapons package (unlike the Puff Dragons, which had fixed guns and were aimed via the pilot looking through a reticle in the side window and tilting the aircraft through a slow, and rather predictable, turn).

You really have to wonder what all the lateral stress from the guns firing did to the airframe. I do remember reading about how the AC-130's in Afghanistan/Iraq needing to be rotated out/replaced on a regular basis from getting rattled apart from all the fire missions.

Interesting wavy patterns in some of the panels on that C119.
 
Humour gratefully accepted, mate. :)

Back a few posts ago, we were talking about the Lysander. The German functional equivalent was the Henschel HS126:

http://1.bp.########.com/-Ax6qnmsqAGQ/VS09TOleTkI/AAAAAAAARrs/G43ncgQxvJc/s1600/10580953_903326559731697_3909493055841106884_o.jpg

Not nearly so popular or widely employed as the Storch, but still a high-winged liaison kite with sporting pretensions and a serious weakness in any airspace not dominated by friendlies...

6262d6242ee12a55833b135ac6852602.jpg


Hs_126.jpg


f3906e0ba8918477b9b9452125e5674e.jpg

It was the Henschel 126 that were the glider tugs used to pull the dozen DFS 230 Gliders on the Gran Sasso Raid, the German plan to rescue the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini from his Italian jailers, these aircraft were successful in undertaking this task, but struggled to gain altitude over the mountains
 
The complexities of aerial gunning explained by Mel Blanc:


Makes you wonder just how many bomber air gunners actually did what the film describes. From the WWII film footage, it appears that it was anything but. Call it the "spray & pray" technique of aerial gunnery - I see an aircraft, I shoot!
 
Once explained, I understood the idea that the bullet would move sideways, with the plane - but until that movie, I had no idea.

Same here... I was thinking, well, lead your shots like in skeet and trap. But that only works if the target is moving and you aren't, or if you're shooting directly ahead of the aircraft. When you're shooting out the side of a fast moving object, it's a different set of calculations entirely.
 
Back
Top Bottom