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ThaiDuong-Jupiters 530
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530-history
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''Jupiter'' 530th The Youngest A-1 Skyraider Squadron of
THE ARMS FORCE OF THE REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM
At
the time the plan calls:''Vietnamization'' were in progressed, the RVN AirForce Branch also expanded.
In 1971, from four (4) Air Divisions it added
two (2) more as: the Vth Air Division and VIth Air Division.
To cover the area from DMZ to...Camau, there
were 4 Corps:
The I CORP has 1st Air Division. Its station is at Danang Air Base
The II CORP has 2nd and 6th Air Divisions at...Phan Rang and Pleiku Air
Base
The III CORP has 3rd and 5th Air Divisions at...Bien Hoa and Tan Son Nhut
Air Base
The IV CORP has 4th Air Division at Can Tho Air Base
On these expansions, there were 19 fighter squadrons, all were equipped
with A-37 anf f-5, except... the 514th, 518th, and 530th; the 514th & 518th in Bien Hoa, these were around quite some
time. The fighter squadrons in the early years were equipped with T-6, T-28,...then A-1 Skyraider after.
In 1970, when the US troops started to pulled out of Pleiku,
Phan Rang and Phu Cat, the 72nd Tactical Wing took over Pleiku and the 530th (Jupiter) fighter squadron were born.
Under the 72nd TW 530th FS were responsible in the area
from Dakto to Ban Me Thuoc and from the borders of Cambodia, Lao and Vietnam...to Bong Son, Tam Quan, Qui Nhon.
The 530th FS were equipped with series of propeller driven
aircrafts, made by Mc Donell Douglass named Skyraider model AD-5 and AD-6 oe A1E & A1H, J, which were ''handed down''
by the USAF.
Its first squadron commander was Major Le Ba Dinh. Dinh
was the best fighter pilot, had his training in Morocco. He speaks fluently French, English, Chinese and Old Fashion Vietnamese
called ''Chu Nom'' (Chinese style writing), also is the artist of old fashion poetry as ''phu''. Dinh also proved as a good
leader, always defened for his personnel when it was necessary. He also took action agaimst a lot of poor decisions of higher
ranking officers; at one incident, he had bumped head with General Toan, who was in charged of the II CORP at the time.
The 2nd squadron commander was Nguyen Van Muoi, Major
Muoi came from 518th and had different characteristic with Dinh, a person only see and do as ''book said'', and very strictly
with rules and regulations.
The 3rd commander was major Bach Dien Son, he took
over the squadron when Muoi became 72nd TW commander. Son was young and energetic person, but he can't hold on the job for
long because it was near the end of the era!
By some time in the Septemper or October of 1974, 530th
squadron got an order to close out its operations because we were out of spare parts--gas--and ammunitions...!
The 530th, just like those others FS, our missions were
to support the ground troops. during the period of 1970 to 1975, VC had increased their supplies and battles were more heavier,
more furious; VC knew that once the US troops pull out, South VN would not have enough weapons, ammunitions and personnel
to support the war.
The 530th had lost 9 aircrfts, which pilots were ejected
or crashed landing in the battle field; all other crafts were counted for damaged by VC ground fires and anti-aircraft's weapons...but
still useable!
***
The history of this squadron accounted for
the number of its pilot had been suffering and lost during the war such as Captain Tran Thanh Long, Lieutenants Nguyen Tai
Co, Nguyen dinh Xanh were ejected. Long and Xanh were captured and released in 1973 by the agreemant of the cease fire and
prisoners exchange. Nguyen Tai Co were rescued by UH-i helicopter based at Pleiku on the same day. He got back and continued
his mission the next day!
Major Pham Van Thang at Kontum, Nguyen Manh
Hung at Dakto, on the mission dive bombs, were shot down and had a fatal crash. Lt. Duong Huynh Ky was skipped bomb napalms
on the hill side of the ''Charlie's Hill'', to stop the agressive movement of VC. He got shot and the aircraft dropped too
low, his right wing clipped the trees and flipped over. Lt. Le Van Do caught 3rd degree burned when his plane took off, stalled,
landed on the side of the runway and caught on fire. He died a week later in the hospital.
Major Nguyen Van Muoi, squadron commander
got hit on the right wheel well, which damaged the hydraulic system. He had to land with one wheel. Lt. Nguyen Van Nham made
a force landing and ran over the fences at Ban me Thuoc air strip. His airplane flipped upside down but he was OK. LT. Pham
Minh Xuan had a flat tire and skipped to the side of runway at Phu Cat air base. Lt. Nguyen Quang Hai made an abort on take
off roll, his airplane's left brake stuck. He tried to stop his bird with the right brake. It got overheated and caught
fire. Hai was near at the end of the runway, which has a deep creater. He had no choice but made a ground loop to the left
and his bird stopped on grass. In another incident, Hai came home with a napalm bomb stuck on his right wing. He made a good
3-point landing, but this napalm bomb fell off his wing at the middle of landing roll causing a lot of scares for him and
the fire truck crew who were driving along his side. Fortunately, this bomb stayed intact. And on the 3rd incident, Hai was
on his final approach after a routine training mission with Major P. D. Hue, his plane's engine exploded loudly, engine oil
were spreaded all over his cockpit. He opened his canopy and landed his plane with his head sticked out to look for the runway.
We found out later, that his airplane's engine had two broken cylinders.
Captain Nguyen Thanh Trung made a force landing
but overshot the runway! He had to crash on the Eastern hill side of the 2nd Corp headquarter; then by Fall 1973, he made
another crash on the PM test mission about 7 miles East of Pleiku and survived, etc...
Almost every pilot in the squadron at one
time or another had been hit by VC ground fire or anti aircraft weapons.
In less than five years, the 530th FS really
took care of their jobs, which were assigned and had a minimum lost to compared with some other squadrons.
Most of its personnel are now settle in US,
some were arrived in 1975 after the fall of Saigon, some came over after had been forced to spend some time in the VC's concentrated
camps!
All their children are grown, well educated
and successfully doing in the work force of America.
There is only one, who lives in Australia
(Nguyen Huu Lac), and four are still in VN (Le Ba Dinh, Phan Dac Hue, Phan Cong Dinh & Vo Thanh Thong).
Every one here is wishing that some day, every
young and old will come home to rebuild Vietnam when Vietnam becomes a democracy country.
California January 24, 2004
Thai Duong Nguyen Thanh Trung
HOA SU
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By Capt Clinton B. Johnson, USNR (Ret.)
June 20, 1965 – A-1 SKYRAIDER MIG Killers
Frustration and
fatigue were starting to simultaneously set in on me on 20 June 1965. We were 30 days into our third at-sea period, and the
ops tempo was intense. Ten days prior we had our first loss, one of our nuggets, Carl Doughtie. The last four days we had
not been especially successful. During those four days I had flown 21 hours on an Alfa strike, two road recces and a seven
and one half hour RESCAP. The strike was marginally successful with 40 percent BDA, the RESCAP was not. We had to leave the
downed pilot when it got dark. One road recce was nothing more than harassment. The other I scored one truck, but someone
almost scored me while I was executing a life-saving pullout just short of bending the prop. I logged two nice round holes
in the aft fuselage.
The day began normally
with the starboard catapult crashing into the water-brake outside my door acting as my alarm clock. It was supposed to be
a stand-down day, but by noon we were suiting up for an emergency RESCAP. An Air Force photo-recon pilot had been shot down
very deep into the northwest corner of North Vietnam. There were already RESCAP aircraft over the downed pilot, but they were
running low on fuel. We were needed for backup coverage.
We manned up, started and were told to shut down. Someone
else had covered the pilot, and they did not need us. We unmanned and returned to the ready room and waited. Two hours later
we got the call again. We manned up, but did not get started again before we were again put on hold. By the time we got to
the ready room we were told to man up again. By now we were fast becoming the leaders in the squadron sweat stain contest.
The sweat stain contest was unique to Skyraider squadrons. The winner was the pilot who could merge the salty white left and
right armpit stains in the center of his flight suit first. This contest was made possible by the USS MIDWAY (CVA-41) laundry
and morale officer who would accept only one flight suit per week per pilot from us. At any rate we were hot, sweaty and beginning
to worry that this man up was going to mean no dinner. This time, however, we started, were told that we were a go mission
and began our taxi forward to the catapults. At the last minute my Plane Captain, AN Halcomb, gave me a slush filled thermos
and a hopeful look (hopeful that he would not have to do a fourth preflight on old 577). I gave him thumbs up and taxied forward
to the starboard catapult. It was almost 1800. I spread and locked the wings, got thumbs up from the final checker and agreed
with the flight deck officer on a 21,300 pound launch weight. As I felt the Skyraider settle into the catapult holdback, I
release the brakes, added full power and scanned the engine instruments. Everything looked good and with the canopy open everything
sounded good -- well at least loud. I returned the cat officer's salute and waited. I saw my flight leader go off the port
cat and turn right for our standard starboard side rendezvous. The humidity was so high that his flap tips left contrails
and my prop was making corkscrew contrails as the carrier moved through the sultry gulf air.
The cat shot killed my
radio. We rendezvoused 1,000 feet on the starboard side of MIDWAY and headed west. After reforming in a finger four formation
I tried to get my radio working. As the second element leader I had a "Middleman" aircraft. My airplane had two radios with
a relay control box that could be switched so that the low aircraft covering the downed pilot could transmit through my aircraft
to the ship using my aircraft at a higher altitude as an antenna relay. I was able to get the number two radio working, but
continued to fiddle with number one so that I could act as relay. I got it working and checked in on tactical frequency as
we went feet dry. Then it failed again.
Feet dry at 12,000 feet heading northwest we were passing north of Thanh Hoa.
LCDR Ed Greathouse was in the lead. On his port wing was LTJG Jim LYNNE. I was on his starboard wing with Charlie Hartmann
on my starboard. We all had the standard RESCAP load: two 150 gallon drop-tanks on the stub racks, four LAU-3 pods with 19
2.75 inch rockets apiece and 800 rounds of 20mm for the four wing cannons. We were flying steadily toward the downed pilot
while I navigated, searched for active low frequency ADF stations (Until September 1965 the North Vietnamese MiGs used the
ADFs listed in our 1964 navigation supplements) and considered what the situation ahead might be.
Suddenly Ed Greathouse
rolled inverted into a near vertical dive with Jim Lynne following. I rolled and followed him down. I was concerned that I
had not heard anything and that we were only 70 miles inland, at least 80 miles from our RESCAP point. A quick radio check
confirmed that my radio was dead. I had missed the buildup to the run-in with the USS STRAUSS (DE-408) alerting us to MiGs
in the area. The MiG pilots were on an intercept for two Skyraiders south of us, but missed and were coming around for another
intercept when they spotted us. STRAUSS was keeping Ed Greathouse updated, and when it was apparent that we were the target,
Ed took us down. At 12,000 feet and 170 knots we looked like Tweetybird to Sylvester the Cat. Our only hope was to get down
low and try to out turn the MiGs. Ed was doing just that. Our split-S got us some speed and reversed our course toward the
ship. I figured that any time my nose was pointed at the ground my ordnance should be armed. I armed the guns and set up the
rockets. About that time I saw a large unguided rocket go past downward. My first inclination was that it was a SAM, but SAMs
generally go up. A second rocket hit the ground near Ed and Jim. There was no doubt we were under attack by MiGs. This was
confirmed when a silver MiG-17 with red marking on wings and tail streaked by Charlie and me heading for Ed. Tracers from
behind and a jet intake growing larger in my mirror were a signal to start pulling and turning. As I put g's on the Skyraider
I could see the two distinct sizes of tracers falling away (The MiG-17 had two 23mm and one 37mm cannon in the nose.) He stayed
with us throughout the turn firing all the way. Fortunately, he was unable to stay inside our turn and overshot. As he pulled
up Charlie got a quick shot at him but caused no apparent damage. He climbed to a perch position and stayed there.
Our
turning had separated us from Ed and Jim. Now that we were no longer under attack my main concern was to rejoin the flight.
I caught a glimpse of the leader and his wingman and headed for them. As we had been flying at treetop level in and out of
small valleys, we had to fly around a small hill to get to them. Coming around the hill we saw Ed Greathouse and Jim LYNNE
low with the MiG lined up behind them. I fired a short burst and missed, but got his attention. He turned hard into us to
make a head-on pass. Charlie and I fired simultaneously as he passed so close that Charlie thought that I had hit his vertical
stabilizer with the tip of my tail hook and Charlie flew through his wake. Both of us fired all four guns. Charlie's rounds
appeared to go down the intake and into the wing root and mine along the top of the fuselage and through the canopy. He never
returned our fire, rolled inverted and hit a small hill exploding and burning in a farm field. Charlie and I circled the wreckage
while I switched back to number two radio. We briefly considered trying to cut off the other MiG, but were dissuaded by the
voice of Ed Greathouse asking what we thought we were doing staying in the area when STRAUSS was reporting numerous bogeys
inbound to our position. We took the hint and headed out low level to the Tonkin Gulf were we rejoined with our flight leader.
By
now the sun was setting guaranteeing a night arrested landing back at MIDWAY. Our radio report was misunderstood by MIDWAY
CIC which believed that one of us had been shot down. It took some effort for Ed Greathouse to convince them that we were
OK and the North Vietnamese were minus one. Rarely does a night carrier landing evoke as little response from a pilot as ours
did. We were so pumped up that we hardly noticed it.
After debriefs all around the politics started. Charlie and I
were informed that we would get no recognition or awards for our MiG kill. SECNAV had been aboard three days earlier when
VF-21 F-4 pilots had bagged the first kills of the war. Their awards were being held until SECNAV could get to Washington,
announce it to the President and present it to Congress with the plea for more funds for F-4 Phantoms to fight the air war.
Obviously,
the success of primitive Skyraiders would undermine his plans. Unfortunately, someone had included our kill in the daily action
report to MACV where it was read by COMSEVENFLT DET "C" who thought that it would be an excellent opportunity for Navy public
relations. Indirectly Ngyuen Cao Ky, the new Premier of South Vietnam, and a Skyraider pilot, heard of it and recognized Ed
Greathouse's name as one of the Skyraider instructors from the RAG. He then demanded our appearance for Vietnamese awards.
The
next day we flew to Saigon for the Five O'clock Follies and were instant celebrities, since the news media did not yet know
about the F-4 kills. They assumed that we were the first which made an even better story. We stayed at the Majestic Hotel
in Saigon where we thoroughly enjoyed the lack of water hours and the availability of our favorite beverages. The next day
we were guests of Premier Ky at the palace were we were awarded Air Gallantry Medals and honorary commissions in the South
Vietnamese Air Force. After the awards ceremony we sat down to tea with Premier Ky and some of his young hot pilots and traded
war stories. He told us that the Skyraider MiG kill had boosted morale tremendously in the VNAF Skyraider squadrons.
Upon
arrival back at MIDWAY we were surprised to learn that there had been a change of heart and we would to be recognized at the
same ceremony as the F-4 pilots. Since they had already been recommended for Silver Stars, Charlie and I go the same while
Ed and Jim got Distinguished Flying Crosses. Due to slow processing of earlier awards Charlie and I wore the Silver Star and
one foreign decoration for about a month as our only medals. Nothing like starting from the top.
A few days later the
carrier went to Yokosuka where Japanese reporters were very interested. We even became the subject of an article in a boy's
adventure comic book. There was a lot of hometown interest also with reporters looking up our wives and parents for comments.
This caused me a problem because I had not told my mother that I was flying combat to avoid worrying her.
Needless
to say, the VA-25 pilots were not about to let the slack-jawed beady-eyed jet pilots (Ed Greathouse's description) forget
our success. The squawk box in the fighter ready rooms got plenty of incoming from our ready room. There was much frustration
in the swept wing tail hook community as the next two kills went to the Air Force in July. Then the North Vietnamese pulled
the MiGs for more pilot training. The only kill between July 1965 and April 1966 was a single Navy kill in October 1965. We
maintained that we embarrassed them into pulling the MiGs.
A combat action happens fast and it is difficult to include
all the influences that affect the outcome, but some sidelights are of interest. The day of the shoot down was the first that
gun camera film was not loaded in our planes. Charlie fired 75 rounds and I fired 52. We both thought we had fired more. I
had considered firing rockets to ensure a kill, but was afraid that the widespread pattern of the LAU-3s would also hit Ed
or Jim. Three of our aircraft suffered engine failures in the near future. There were no fighters airborne at the time and
they missed a great opportunity for the bogeys launched after the shoot down. Two years later I was invited to Miramar to
brief the people setting up "TOP GUN." My briefer said, "Well, you were flying the F-4?" "No." "Oh, the F-8?" "No." "The A-4?"
"No." "A-7?" "No." "Well, what the hell were you flying?" "The Skyraider." Then his jaw went slack and his eyes got beady.
They're all the same. (See editorial comments below.)
Our squadron, VA-25, "The Fist of the Fleet," was the last operational
Skyraider attack squadron in the Navy. We were flying a 20-year-old design that had been perfected about as far as the engineers
could take it. Everyone thought that our time was over as front-line attack. What everyone forgot was that Ed Heinemann had
mandated that the Skyraider not only had to be able to carry that 2,000 pound bomb a thousand miles to Tokyo and return to
the ship, but that it also had to be able to defend itself against air attack. We never forgot. Unfortunately, even Ed Heinemann
could not foresee SAMs. The Skyraider just did not have the top end speed to evade them. In April 1968 VA-25 retired the Skyraider
in favor of the A-7 Corsair II. The aircraft and pilot, Ted Hill, that made the last combat carrier landing led four A-7s
in a flyby, broke off to the east and disappeared out of our sight, but not our hearts. Ted flew it to Pensacola where it
resides in the National Museum of Naval Aviation in our squadron colors. I flew six combat missions in that aircraft.
I
flew as many hours in the A-4 Skyhawk as I did in the Skyraider and later flew the A-7. I truly enjoyed my A-4 time and it
became my favorite. However, the Skyraider was something special. Even through my right leg has shrunken to the same size
as my left leg, the carbon monoxide is cleared from my blood and the stack gas from my lungs, there is still that feeling
that the Skyraider was where I was meant to be.
One final note. The first flight of the Skyraider was on 18 March 1945,
my eighth birthday.
Editor: When news of the MiG shoot down arrived in VA-122, we fired off a message to our sister
RAG squadrons at Miramar - offering "our assistance in improving their air-combat training." Another MiG shoot down by VA-176
on October 9, 1966 proved the ACM skill of SPAD pilots was not a fluke. Shortly, we heard that Miramar would be the home of
the new TOP GUN School. What SPAD pilots had known all along really was important in combat.
(Source: midwaysailor.com
Thăng Long thành hoài cổ
(Bà Huyện Thanh Quan)
Tạo hóa gây chi cuộc hí trường Ðến nay thấm
thoát mấy tinh sương Lối xưa xe ngựa hồn thu thảo Nền cũ lâu
đài bóng tịch dương Ðá vẫn trơ gan cùng tuế nguyệt Nước còn
cau mặt với tang thương Nghìn năm gương cũ soi kim cổ Cảnh đấy
người đây, luống đoạn trường
Chưa bao giờ các câu thơ của Bà Huyện Thanh
Quan lại trở nên thắm thía như vầy.
Nhìn các xác phi cơ thân yêu trong đống hoang tàn nầy
mà tai tôi như còn mơ hồ nghe được tiếng động cơ quay máy ngày nào.
Ôi thân phận những con tàu! ... có khác gì đâu thân phận của những anh hùng vị
quốc vong thân đang nghìn thu an nghỉ! Xin một lần nghiêm chào những con tàu đã
cùng chúng tôi một thời ngang dọc .
tinhxua
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II
Corps - Kontum, Bình Định, Pleiku, Phú Bổn, Phú Yên, Dar Lac, Khánh Hòa, Ninh Thuận,
Tuyên Đức, Quảng Đức, Lâm Đồng, Bình Thuận, Cam Ranh
III Corps - Bình Tuy, Long Khánh, Phước Long, Bình Long, Bình Dương,
Tây Ninh, Hậu Nghĩa, Biên Hòa, Phước Tuy, Long An, Gia Định, Vũng Tàu, Saigon
IV Corps - Gò Công, Kiến Tường, Kiến Phong, Định Tường,
Kiến Hòa, Vĩnh Bình, Vĩnh Long, An Giang, Kiên Giang, Chương Thiện, Phong Dinh, Ba Xuyên,
An Xuyên, Đức Liêu
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''Closed Support'' Oil painting by Nguyen Thanh Trung |
HISTORY OF DOUGLAS SKYRAIDER
The A-1 Skyraider
originated as a carrier-based torpedo and dive bomber. As the XBT2D-1, it first flew March 18, 1945, and deliveries as the
AD-1 to the Navy began in November 1946. In 1962 the Skyraider became the A-1.
The Skyraider was the first single-seat
torpedo/dive bomber to serve with the Navy. Its success in both Korea and Vietnam seriously raised the question in 1966 of
reopening production, which ended in 1957.
Douglas Aircraft built 3,180 Skyraiders for the Navy. They were single-engine,
low-wing monoplanes with a maximum speed of 318 mph, an initial climb rate of 2,300 feet per minute and a service ceiling
of 32,000 feet. The aircraft had a wingspan of 50 feet 9 inches, a length of 38 feet 10 inches, and a height of 15 feet 8.25
inches. It weighed 12,313 pounds empty and 25,000 pounds loaded. Armament consisted of four wing-mounted 20mm cannons and
an additional weapons load of 7,000 pounds, which could be varied among bombs, gun pods, napalm canisters and up to 12 rockets.
From 1950 to 1953 in the Korean War and from 1962 to 1975 in Vietnam, the "Sandy," as it was called, served as a mainstay
workhorse due to its payload, range and durability. The Air Force acquired it's a-1s from the Navy for counterinsurgency duty
in Southeast Asia. In addition to the Air Force, the Navy and South Vietnamese flew them in combat. Two Navy Skyraiders even
combined to shoot down a Russian built MiG jet fighter. However, the primary mission of the A-1 was close air support for
ground troops because of its heavy ordnance load and accuracy.
In April 1963, the Air Force announced the assignment
of two A-1E squadrons to the 1st Air Commando Wing at Hurlburt Field after July 1. These 50 aircraft also increased air commando
manning by approximately 300. By 1964, Hurlburt focused primarily on "pipeline" aircrew training for personnel going to Southeast
Asia. To facilitate that training, dual-control Skyraiders arrived in significant numbers. They provided better and safer
training than did the single-control models. Air commando A-1E commitments worldwide included 50 A-1Es at Bien Hoa, South
Vietnam. These were assigned to Pacific Air Forces rather than to the 1st ACW, but the wing trained the crews. In 1966, training
of Vietnamese A-1E pilots began at Hurlburt Field due to the disadvantages of training in Vietnam. By June 20, 35 pilots had
reported for this training.
On June 24, 1965, shortly before noon, two A-1Es collided north of Crestview, Fla., killing
both crews. These four fatalities were the only wing aircrew losses in the first half of that year. Considering the hazards
in flying aircraft of that age and especially the aging A-1E, the 10,000-hour milestone of accident-free flying reached by
the 4407th Combat Crew Training Squadron in 1969 was a singular accomplishment and believed to be a record for this aircraft.
It was then 24 years since the Skyraider first flew and 12 years since production ended. However, on June 17, 1970, "the law
of averages" caught up with the 4407th when one of its aircrews made a precautionary landing after smelling fuel in the cockpit.
Before the airmen could escape, the aircraft exploded on the runway.
As American participation in the war in Vietnam
declined, more and more aircraft were transferred to the Vietnamese in the hope they would be able to prosecute the war successfully
on their own. In 1972 as part of that "Vietnamizatin," all nine A-1Es of the 4407th CCTS were transferred to the Vietnamese
air force and the A-1E training program at Hurlburt ended.
Skyraiders continued in first line service well into the
Vietnam conflict, where they once again became star performers in a close air support role. By this time, the Skyraider had
picked up a new designation. It had become the A-1 in the 1962 redesignation of naval aircraft. The last Skyraider left active
service late in 1971.
Throughout its long life, the Skyraider, (in addition to earning many nicknames, including Able
Dog, Spad, Hobo, Firefly, Zorro and "Crazy Water Buffalo," a VNAF nickname) was produced in a wide variety of models calling
for a regular alphabet soup of designations. The AD-1's and AD-2's were also produced with ECM equipment, and had an operator
behind the pilot as the AD-1Q and AD-2Q. The AD-3 came in four basic variants: AD-3, AD-3N, night attack; AD-3Q, electronic
countermeasures; and AD-3W, an AEW radar-toting model. AD-4's and AD-5's were also built in N, Q and W versions. AD-4B's,
with a tactical nuclear weapon capability, were produced and some AD-4's were modified to AD-4L's (winterized). AD-4N's saw
modification to AD-4NA (day attack) and AD-4NL (winterized). The lengthened AD-5 featured side-by-side seating in the cockpit.
Other variants were produced over the years in small numbers. AD-6's and AD-7's completed the series. The last of
3,180 Skyradiers was built in 1957. With the redesignation of naval aircraft in 1962, AD-5's became A-1E's and AD-6's and
-7's became A-1H's and J's, respectively. The Skyraiders served in Southeast Asia with the U.S. and Vietnamese Air Forces.
Source: Skyraider Association & USAF Museum
In 1963, the U.S. Air Force began a program to modify the AD-5 Skyraider for service in Vietnam and redesignated it the A-1E.
Because of its ability to carry large bomb loads, absorb heavy ground fire, and fly for long periods at low altitude, the
A-1E was particularly suited for close-support missions. Specifications
Span: 50 ft. 1/4 in.
Length: 40 ft.
Height: 15 ft. 9 5/8 in.
Weight: 24,782 lbs. maximum
Armament: Four 20mm cannons and a wide assortment of bombs, rockets, mines, grenades, flares and gun pods
Engine: Wright R-3350 of 2,700 hp.
Cost: $414,000 Performance
Maximum speed: 325 mph.
Cruising speed: 240 mph.
Range: 1,500 miles
Service Ceiling: 26,200 ft. A1E's were referred to as "Sandy," a name derived from their USAF tactical call sign in Vietnam
A - 1 và mưa buồn TN
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