I flew from NZ to Argentine in 1987. On the way back we landed to refuel right down south and either side of the runway there were bomb craters. We were met with armed soldiers, not allowed to take any photos and were marched into the terminal until the plane was ready to leave - about 1.5 hours.
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'Once you are infected with the travel bug you have it for the rest of your life - there is NO cure'
One fact not generally known was the debacle of retro fitting the in flight air to air refuelling on the Hercules transport planes that did the troop and logistical work. Flying men and supplies from the UK to the Falklands.
It was such a rush job the contractors quality control systems were pathetic and whilst refuelling the flight decks were awash with aviation fuel.
Not a nice way to have to fly an aircraft. Peoples lives were on the line so the pilots and flight crews just did what they do. They carried on regardless and flew with fuel having to be mopped up and the aircraft a flying incendiary device.
I saw the results after the war ended and they used water to show the brass how much fuel was going into the flight decks. I reckon I use less when having a shower.
Watched 1/2 of it today, will watch rest later (d/l limited) but sounds very informative and in away, exciting.
The Chiefs of Air Staff had only given the mission a 40% chance of being successful but it was as we know, remarkable men and flying machines, the set up with the Victor Refuelling aircraft was amazing too.
I flew from NZ to Argentine in 1987. On the way back we landed to refuel right down south and either side of the runway there were bomb craters. We were met with armed soldiers, not allowed to take any photos and were marched into the terminal until the plane was ready to leave - about 1.5 hours.
I've been on that flight as a passenger in an Aerolineas Argentinas 747 from Buenos Aires to Auckland. The stop was at a military base in the south of the country, not the Falklands, to refuel. The early 747s which we called the Classic, didn't have the range also the westerly winds in that part of the world can have a great affect on fuel burnoff. I was quite surprised when we landed there. I had a window seat and noticed the black top sealed runway was only just wide enough to accommodate the aircraft. Mishandling of a slight cross wind could have bogged us down on the grass. It made me wary of the airline, allowing it's aircraft to land on an unsuitable runway. Certainly didn't meet the requirements for the Company I worked for... My flight was around 1985 and I don't recall any bomb craters or armed military. Maybe I was too busy checking my underwear after the hairy landing !
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Pleased that I could do so Landy, Johnq and Landfall.
It was sent to me on an email from a friend, I was glad they sent it to me and I was able to share it, I was unaware of that part of the Falklands ops, must have been a real morale booster to the trapped British citizens there, and a morale wrecker for the Argentinian forces stationed on the island.
-- Edited by Vic41 on Sunday 5th of January 2014 11:36:37 PM