Without our fantastic crew chiefs and ground support teams, none of this helicopter flying in Vietnam could ever have happened. Our crew chiefs flew all day with us, loading
and unloading cargo and passengers, putting their lives in our pilots’ hands
hour after hour, day after day (some nights), landing after landing.
Without them the machines would have
deteriorated to un-flyable junk in less than a week. After working all day in
the air, they many times worked all night to maintain the helicopters. Sometimes
they had to wash blood off the cabin floor and sweep our maggots from dead
marines.
They changes out engines overnight, replaced gear boxes, rotor blades
and many other components--in the field at times. They filled about 100 zerk fitting with grease,
most of them every night; there must be 50 zerk fitting on the H-34 rotor head
alone. They did all the refueling
whenever we stopped to refuel.
These were the most dedicated crews that could
possibly have existed, anywhere, anytime, any war. They never got enough thanks and credit for
their sacrifices. Thank you crew chiefs,
gunners mechanics, avionics and armory personnel.
This is an excerpt from my book:
http://www.amazon.com/Adventures-Helicopter-Pilot-helicopter-Vietnam/dp/1500936138/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1417241450&sr=1-1&keywords=helicopter+collier
We just posted a review of your book on the VVA Veteran magazine's Books in Review II page at http://vvabooks.wordpress.com
ReplyDeleteMarc Leepson, Arts Editor, The VVA Veteran, Vietnam Veterans of America, mleepson@vva.org
We just posted a review of your book on the VVA Veteran magazine's Books in Review II page at http://vvabooks.wordpress.com
ReplyDeleteMarc Leepson, Arts Editor, The VVA Veteran, Vietnam Veterans of America, mleepson@vva.org