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More trivia on flight and oxygen:
1) the F102 always gave us 100%- there was no diluter function. Some ground-pounding designer made the decision we'd always be wearing pressure suits to go after those high-altitude bombers. As it turned out it generally took a direct order to get a pilot airborne in the old skin-tight MC-3&4 partial pressure suits, because they were very unconfortable and visual lookout was definitely impaired because you had to use your free hand to shove your head around to look to each side. Well, one of our guys came down with his lower face singed - claimed the oxygen had flamed his moustache wax. Good story but what had reallyy happened was that he forgot to shut off his oxygen when he lit a cigarette . . .speaking of p-suits I always had a good laugh when I saw the Russky pics of their MiG21 pilots walking along in p-suits that looked jusy like our partial pressure suits. Their flight surgeons were a lot more involved in daily activities than ours - thank God. Next story - this crusty old WW2 pilot and I were off to Tyndall from RG in a T33 - the wx down there was DS and we were at about 37000 to save enough fuel for an alternate. He tried to light a cig but it wouldn't take - the next hour he spent whining at me because I wouldn't descend so he could grab a smoke. Bends - we used to get bubbles under our skin in the older T33s because the pressurization was so weak. Felt like little bugs crawling under the skin (mobile chiggers?). So before a p-suit flight we normally prebreathed 100% O2 for 30 minutes to flush out the N2 to minimize the chance of getting bends. We were on another U2 intercept mission when my squadron mate stopped the flightline trolley, opened up his faceplate, threw up, wiped off his lips, closed the faceplate and motioned to the young, now wide-eyed, airman driver to press on. Hangovers and p-suits don't really go together. He still hacked the mission, though. Speaking of nicotine fits - I had a friend who used to chew tobacco in a 104 - he kept a Prince Albert can in his Gsuit pocket to catch the spit. Never was able to bounce him at just the right time, though. Being a non-smoker I just don't understand guys like that. As for the Rocky Mountains, when we get flatlanders up here for a visit and take them for a drive up over Trail Ridge road - peak altitude about 12,200, they usually doze off because they won't breathe (pant) enough. Both the Pikes Peak and Mt. Evans roads will let you drive up over 14,000. Walt BJ |
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