packerbacker
Gold Member
- Joined
- May 11, 2005
- Messages
- 8,310
- Reaction score
- 2,992
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Northern California
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Back in 1967 I was on the flightdeck of the aircraft carrier USS Constellation. We were flying bombing missions over N. Vietnam while sailing the South China Sea. It was broad daylight and, at the present time, we didn't have anything in the air. All of a sudden we were given the "Standby to recover aircraft" command. We were thinking maybe a wounded bird from another carrier or something. The mailplane had been there only a few days before and they always say "Standby to recover the COD" when she showed up.
We climbed into the catwalks to clear the landing area and all of a sudden, there it was. It was an all black U2. It landed almost silently. After recovery, the pilot walked a case, probably film or photos, to the island (The superstructure above the flightdeck) stayed up there for a while and then returned to the plane. We pushed the U2, by hand, back to the rear of the deck. Then the "Standby to launch aircraft" command sounded. We were wondering why we weren't pushing her up to one of the catapaults for launching. That plane, a jet, used no catapault to leave the deck and he only used maybe 1/3 the length of the ship before he was airborn. We've launched propeller driven aircraft without cats before but never a jet. They are built like a glider so there is a lot of lift in the wide wingspan. If there are any that doubt this story, I apologize for stirring your doubting side but, I swear, it's the truth.
We climbed into the catwalks to clear the landing area and all of a sudden, there it was. It was an all black U2. It landed almost silently. After recovery, the pilot walked a case, probably film or photos, to the island (The superstructure above the flightdeck) stayed up there for a while and then returned to the plane. We pushed the U2, by hand, back to the rear of the deck. Then the "Standby to launch aircraft" command sounded. We were wondering why we weren't pushing her up to one of the catapaults for launching. That plane, a jet, used no catapault to leave the deck and he only used maybe 1/3 the length of the ship before he was airborn. We've launched propeller driven aircraft without cats before but never a jet. They are built like a glider so there is a lot of lift in the wide wingspan. If there are any that doubt this story, I apologize for stirring your doubting side but, I swear, it's the truth.