Date: Sunday, August 30, 1998 8:47 PM
Hi JC,
I saw Mr. Millers page on tail numbers for EC-47's. I guess that answers my
question of two airplanes having the same last three numbers. 45-1133 was a
EC-47P which was shot down, and 43-15133 was a EC-47N which he states was
destroyed on the ground by rocket fire at Pleiku in May 1970. He asks if this
was the plane in the photo. (I'm assuming he means the one on the page of
slides I sent you.)
I think I can say yes on this. I looked at the slide mount and it had Apr 70
stamped on it. I know for sure that the melted propellers came from the plane
that was hit by rocket fire that day. The slides of the melted props was
stamped June 70, so the dates seem to jive.
I had to think about it for a while, and this is how I remember it. I was off
duty in the barracks area at the time. It was during daylight hours when the
first 122 mm Katusha(spelling?) rocket hit the flightline scoring an almost
direct hit on the aircraft, which had a full load of fuel on board, and it
burst into flame.
The air-raid siren sounded and everybody was running into the bunkers when a
second Katusha landed in the street between two barracks. It must have had a
delayed fuse, because it burrowed into the ground before it exploded, blowing
a crater about 10 feet deep and 20 feet across. Two Purple Hearts were earned
that day. One was a mechanic on the flightline, whose name I cant recall, who
suffered shrapnel wounds. Fortunately they weren't life threatening. The other
was Sgt. "Smokie" Smoak, who, like me, was off duty in the barracks area, but
didn't quite make it into the bunker fast enough, and was hit in the head with
a football size chunk of blacktop. Again, fortunately, his injuries weren't
life threatening either, and after a few days in the hospital, he was good as
new.
Sgt. Smoak's picture is on page 60 in the year book. That night I went to work,
but the SP's had the revetment cordoned off, so we couldn't get too close.
After checking for any more unexploded ordinance, they brought in a big front
end loader and scooped the remains of 133 into a dump truck and hauled it away.
From that day on until we moved to DaNang a few months later, we had to work
in our flak jackets and steel helmets. And heaven help you if the chief of
maintenance caught you not wearing them, you would be in for a sever repremand.
Well, JC, I hope this helps. If you want to forward any of this to Mr. Miller,
or include it in any way on the site, be my guest.
Regards,
John Fuertinger
The below information was received on February, 12, 2002
from another eye witness, the Maintenance Flight Chief,
MSgt Edwin L. Diehl, on duty at the time of the attack.
My name is Edwin L Diehl and I was stationed with the 362 TEWS
in aircraft maintenance at Pleiku and DaNang, March 1970 to March
1971.I was a MSgt. and was a Flight Chief at the time aircraft
133 got the direct hit.
I was making my rounds checking what maintenance problems we had
on the mission returning aircraft. I stopped at aircraft 133 and
talked with the young crew chief. He was an A1C but I do not
remember his name, there were two or three airman from A and E
or Field Maintenance squadrons also at the aircraft working.
The crew chiefs biggest problem was the aircraft had a fuel leak
and he was removing the under body panel that had a million screws
in it to get to the fuel cell.
I left 133 and was walking up the ramp checking on the other aircraft.
A Ssgt. Podaka ( Spelling ?? ) ask me to help him run a engine he
had just changed a oil pressure transmitter on. We had finished, I
was standing in front of his aircraft looking west (it seemed to me)
the SSgt was standing on the left wing in the process of closing up
his aircraft for it was ready to go.
The first rocket hit near the md-3 ( electrical generator ) as I
was looking that direction, the blast blew the SSgt. off the wing,
for we were only three or four aircraft away from 133. There were
small bunkers at the end of each reventment wall, big enough to hold
two people, where the other two guys come from I don't know but
there were four of us in that small bunker looking to the west, the
second rocket hit aircraft 133 dead center. I assure you if the
third rocket had come our way nothing would have hit us in the head
for we were no longer looking, it might have hit us on our butts
for all four of our heads were on the ground with our rears in the
air, like I said the bunkers were small, maybe big enough for two
people.
We saw the radome and the cockpit section blow across the ramp in
front of the aircraft. I was so worried about the airman working
on 133. My heart told me to go check on them but my feet would not
move, a feeling I don't know how to explain.
The all clear siren blew in just a few minutes, I took off running
not knowing what I was going to find. I and the others got there
looking for the crew chief and the other airman, at first we didn't
see them but all of a sudden they came out of the large bunker
across the ramp. I ran over and grabbed the crew chief and gave
him a big hug, I know he thought I was crazy, I was a happy person.
His only words were " Sgt. I don't have to fix the fuel leak now ".
What happened when the first rocket hit, the crew chief said he
laid down under the aircraft and the others did the same. The crew
chief said something told him to run to the bunker across the ramp
( the good lord up above ), the others followed him with the last
one getting a little help being blown into the bunker from the
second rocket blast. No one was hurt. This story had a very good
ending.
A week or so later another rocket hit the md-3 that was supplying
power to an aircraft that was parked in the same spot 133 had been
parked. After that we didn't do any maintenance on aircraft parked
on that spot. We did the maintenance on the aircraft parked up the
ramp and when there was no maintenance left we'd tow them to the
spot where 133 had been hit, if another rocket come in it may have
got another aircraft but at least not any people. The next time we
may not be so lucky.
J. C. This is my story, it may be to long or not worded correctly,
be my guest if it needs changed. Ed Diehl.
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Am sending (attachment) you a pic of AN133 burned up in the revetment at
Pleiku in May 1970. I was sked out on this bird that morning, but ran for
the bunker (0430) when the rockets (mortors?) came pounding in. After the
attack, and after we showed up, they put us on another bird. The fire was
still smoking from the 133 revetment. Ed Benningfield
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