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Huey War Vietnam From The Backseat Bruce Nesmith

  • SKU: BELL-52647592
Huey War Vietnam From The Backseat Bruce Nesmith
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Huey War Vietnam From The Backseat Bruce Nesmith instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bruce Nesmith
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 16.85 MB
Pages: 225
Author: Bruce Nesmith
ISBN: B0BVJ5SHH1
Language: English
Year: 2023

Product desciption

Huey War Vietnam From The Backseat Bruce Nesmith by Bruce Nesmith B0BVJ5SHH1 instant download after payment.

A UH-1H Huey helicopter is a flimsy machine. It’s the 1960s equivalent of a World War I biplane. It’s flimsy, easily killed, under powered, simple, lightly armed and an unlikely success in a bad place at a bad time.
Going to war as a Huey crew chief was a an experience that can’t be described. You sat there in that flimsy machine totally exposed to the enemy. There was no cockpit, no armored seat, no bulkhead, no illusion of safety for the crew chief or gunner. We sat there with nothing between us and the outside world. When it rained, we were cold and wet and when there was incoming fire we had nothing but a little armored chest protector that would stop some small arms fire. Lucky crew had a three quarter inch steel plate to sit on to provide some illusionary protection for their family jewels.
Most of us didn’t use any seat belts or safety harnesses. We depended on our own agility and senses to remain in the aircraft as it maneuvered, sometimes violently, in the air. We regularly had to leave our seats to handle cargo or assist the wounded or even to clear the cargo compartment of possible hazards left by departing troops. When we came under fire we were expected to continue to sit there, to remain calm and cool, and return fire with our M-60 machine guns, while continuing to perform our other essential duties.
The crew chief and the gunner were the controlling eyes and voices of the back half of the helicopter. The pilots couldn’t see to their rear or underneath it. They had to trust the two men in the back to provide information about oncoming air traffic, about conditions on the ground and for accurate information when landing in tight places or maneuvering the aircraft between and through obstacles. We had to be able to provide clear and concise directions under any conditions and our pilots had to willingly follow them as we maneuvered the helicopters through small precise adjustments. They had to trust us to manage loading and unloading the aircraft...

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