F-86 at an airshow.
Sunday, February 16, 2020
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A blog by a "sucker" and a "loser" who served her country in the Navy.
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3 comments:
I remember when a civilian F-86 smashed into an ice cream shop in Sacramento in the 1970s. Pulled too much pitch and could not climb. Many kids and parents perished in flames. Pilot survived.
Also first plane to break the 'sound barrier' flown by hero George Welsh. Credit always goes to some other pilot, I forget the name. Because it was not in level flight; F-86 capabilities were top secret; and Welsh was a civilian and not Air Force with lots of top brass, good ole boy fishin' an' huntin' cronies like the Air Force pilot was who is always credited.
That looks like Paul Keppler based at KUES ( Waukesha WI), not far from my home plate. I believe George Welch (not Welsh) was killed in an F-86A that encountered structural problems. The crash caused a redesign of the tail. As they say, never fly the A model of anything.
seafury
Thanks for the name correction. I was unsure and tried to check it (from my own blog!) but weak Mexican WiFi foiled me.
It was an early F-100 Hun that killed Welch, the one with the short fin. Ironically the famously litigious 'right stuff' pilot from Norcal lazily commanded a perfected Hun unit.
I saw Huns at Phan Rang at least as late as 1970. First Wild Weasel/Iron Hand aircraft. 1st in, last out.
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