Demise of a Crusader (187th AHC) Smoke Ship (RVN)

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I put this into my hard drive to add to a compilation of destroyed helicopters, done by a 190th AHC brother. While it looks pretty serious, God's Own Lunatics (VN helicopter pilots) can always find some humor somehow.

Rick Scheffing and I were the last ones to fly this one (Smokey). We had been hit by a pair of 17 pound (war head) rockets from one of our own Cobras while we were making a smoke run. We managed to get it back home despite having no hydraulics and one minor wound. We landed it in front of the maintenance hangar where it sat for two days. The local VC/NVA decided to interject their will on the situation by landing a mortar next to it, catching it on fire and igniting all the fuel, ammo and grenades still on board. Here's the funny part! We had South Vietnamese fire fighters at the camp who came out with their foam truck. As we watched, they would charge the burning helicopter (three or four of them on a hose) until something cooked off and exploded. They would scurry back to their truck until things settled down then charge the fire again. Inevitably more bullets and grenades would cook off with red tracer rounds tumbling through the air and they scurried away. That went on until the ship ended up the way it looks here. As all that happened all I could think about was an old Keystone Cops movie, so I named the fire crew the Keystone Fire Department. I was laughing at the time and it still makes me laugh today, just like watching one of those old movies.

Black and white photo from my personal collection. Color photo from Gerry Kunishige, another smoke ship pilot. Same ship, different cameras.:eek:
 

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Thank you for going. I enjoy your stories.

Thank you. I just reunited with Gerry two days ago after 50 years. I reminded him of that smoke ship and he sent me his photo of it. I also asked him if he still had the 12.7 round he and I took in the nose of our ship during a night extraction. That bullet was heading right to his crotch but hit a radio first. He still has it. I had never seen a Hawaiian kid look so pale after he saw how close he came.

BTW, that is Nui Ba Din, the Black Virgin Mountain in the back ground in Gerry's photo. We had the top and base. The bad guys had every thing in the middle.
 
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The Crusaders used the smoke ship extensively. We lived smack in the middle of War Zone C, surrounded on three sides by Cambodia. The ship was fitted with a 40 gallon bladder filled with "smoke oil" with plumbing out to a ring with several nozzles mounted onto the exhaust stack. Exhaust gas temp is about 400-600 degrees centigrade in flight. The original Smokys had a hand pump that one person in the back had to operate. Later, the one we had, was equipped with an electric pump with a hand held switch on a cord to the cockpit. We tried to fly as low to the ground and as slow as we could for the best smoke screen. We flew between the good guys and where we thought the bad guys were. Our guns would be firing right behind us with rockets and mini-gun. We jokingly call the ship "magnet a**) for it's propensity for attracting bullets. One day we went through three sets of rotor blades. Never a dull moment in a smoke ship. There was obviously more to the mission than we have time for
 
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