Hi Steve:
I noticed your comment about the E being a Navalized C model. I know you are Navy because a Marine would have called it a Marinized C model. As noted below I had the pleasue of working with the Navy, great group of folks, very sharp.
I was the tech rep for HT8 in 1972-73 timeframe. We were at Ellison (sp) field in Pensacola and then move to Whiting Field. HT18 was right next to us at Whiting and I was called over there one time for something, not sure what though. When were you at HT18? It would be neat if we were there at the same time.
I'm trying to think what structure was still Magnesium. The B model had only the bottom of the tailboom mag, all other skin was aluminum. My bird 62-2046 was this way as my tailboom had a big crack down the bottom. Originally the transmission and other drivetrain components had some mag cases, and those would have been changed to aluminum, but the Army got those later anyway.
Bell actually made 27 HH-1K's so all were made that way not a rework later. I just noticed that 8 UH-1L's, 45 TH-1L's and 27 HH-1K's were made under the same contract number. In the days of 1966 Bell was running three assembly lines, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Every 8 hours a Huey came off the line.
Bell has a habit of using the basic model print, in this case say a B model cabin, then modifiying that print to create all the rest of the small cabin aircraft or 204 cabin versions. I wouldn't be surprised if I went back to the prints, all the various versions listed here started from a basic B and then you added the mods necessary to come up with whatever final version you wanted. Whenever I have to go to the old prints, the first few pages are nothing but notes and changes.
Ed
"Whether you think you can or can't, your're right". Henry Ford