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More to the point, what did the manufacturer have to say on that subject?
I would think the operator would have better information on the ditching behavior than would the manufacturer. Unlike some other Naval aircraft, the TBF/TBM were known as "floaters" and it was not uncommon for them to remain at or near the surface for some time after they were dumped overboard or ditched. My first instructor in A-school had started his career a thousand years earlier as a little pup turret gunner in Avengers and would occasionally share stories with us from either his time in them, or things he had heard from the "old hands" when he was first starting out. (OT That dude was crusty old, to the point you couldn't even guess - I noted that he didn't carry an ID card, just a disk with a Roman emperor's profile on it. His first ship was some sort of trireme, "I **** you not".) Without knowing sea state, winds and surf conditions at the time, or taking into account the controlability issues, its very difficult to second guess Bush's choice of silk or ditch. I would rather ditch than bale, primarily because I was a SAR swimmer and I believed that I would find a way to not drown. Knowing that Bishop, a former NCAA swimming ace, had died in an H-46 in the best shape of his life didn't tarnish my unshakeable faith that if I survived impact, I would make it out of the water alive. (Or be found in the wreck with my hands around the pilot's neck.) v/r Gordon |
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