Has anyone got a picture of the control panel on the ceiling in the UH-1H cockpit?
Andy
Andy
Lou Drendel's HUEY Squadron/Signal book* has a picture of the control panel on the ceiling
but it's a B/C... All of the poles/tubing frame for the passenger area seats that I saw in
person or photos were grey, as was the entire compartment including the sound proofing
fabric - appx FS 36231 Dk gull gray (which isn't dark, it's a medium shade)...
Thanx Mel - I never knew what those brackets were for medevac litters!
Gino & Andy: Wayne Mutza's WALK AROUND UH-1 GUNSHIPS* is a great pictorial reference
incl the overhead panel, seats, etc. But on one pg he states to the effect that the only
long-fuselage (D/H) heavily armed Hueys were RAAF and VNAF but a couple of pages later he says,
"Long-fuselage Huey variants were designed primarily for the troop transport role; however,
they qualified as gunships when equipped with offensive armament." It depends on which of
his definitions you want to accept!
In Squadron's GUNSLINGERS IN ACTION, they tell the history of arming helicopters because
it didn't take long to realize the bad guys weren't going to let you come and go as you
pleased unmolested. They even armed those little bubble Bell OH-13s - and on the other
extreme were the Chinook Guns A Go-Go! I have no argument that my company's ‘slicks'
with the XM-23 M-60 armament was defensive. But from the day they installed the minigun,
searchlight (from Sheridan tanks!) and night vision scope with Army standardized equipment
and mountings, on one of my company's slicks (which wasn't a one of a kind) until the day it
went down killing the entire crew, that ship was a gunship. So were the D/Hs with twin M-60s,
twin .50 cal, etc.
Clear right!
Howie