View Single Post
  #40  
Old October 1st 03, 09:07 PM
Stolly
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Probably similar amounts, since the US pilots in question were flying over
the south, as far as could be assertained.

As they got further north they couldn't be heard unless there were pretty
high.

"Stephen Harding" wrote in message
...
Stolly wrote:

He was fighting with the British Army in Malaya while the US was in

Vietnam
around 1965 and said that the contrast between the radio discipline used

by
the RAF Hunter pilots on ground attack missions was like the difference
between night and day compared to the US pilots flying similar missions

over
Vietnam.

Malaya was close enough to pick up the US comms coming out of Vietnam.

He said "Our Hunter pilots were Target 2 miles. Diving now, Tally ho"

(yes
they actually said Tally ho) "the Yanks were shouting and swearing about
ground fire this and f*cking that"


So just how much "f*cking that" ground fire were RAF Hunter pilots

experiencing
compared to US pilots over Vietnam?

Pilots tend to be pretty calm over training ranges too, but I'm not

certain
that is very indicative of the radio discipline of the individual.


SMH