For us old Army guys all those letters sound a bit suspicious like some other alphabet groups.
135 (A, E, R, Q, T) Stick & Rudder 1974-1997 . Three years after that as self loading cargo overseas. Castle CCTS 1984-87.

For us old Army guys all those letters sound a bit suspicious like some other alphabet groups.
135 (A, E, R, Q, T) Stick & Rudder 1974-1997 . Three years after that as self loading cargo overseas. Castle CCTS 1984-87.
For us old Army guys all those letters sound a bit suspicious like some other alphabet groups.. Please educate us that don't know what they mean.
We called those guys âZoomies, propeller-heads, and jet jockeysâ. I donât know what they called us. I do know they didnât like me when I got in their airplane with muddy boots. So we all took extra care to get more mud on our boots before getting in a plane. You know - - - those airliners were you sit on the floor because that was the only thing in there.For us old Army guys all those letters sound a bit suspicious like some other alphabet groups.. Please educate us that don't know what they mean.
Very roughly:For us old Army guys all those letters sound a bit suspicious like some other alphabet groups.. Please educate us that don't know what they mean.
I once picked up a prisoner at Wright-Patterson AFB and had an occasion to eat in one of their chow halls. I thought I died and went to heaven. It even put the Navy chow halls to shame and they were quite good.We called those guys âZoomies, propeller-heads, and jet jockeysâ. I donât know what they called us. I do know they didnât like me when I got in their airplane with muddy boots. So we all took extra care to get more mud on our boots before getting in a plane. You know - - - those airliners were you sit on the floor because that was the only thing in there.
But seriously their support was awesome. They provided support logistically, tactically, and for intelligence. I always envied those in the military who slept in a nice dry bed and ate food prepared minutes ago as opposed to years ago and stored in a can.
When I went on R&R during my Vietnam tour I was excited to see a silver plane with a PanAm logo on it. The first plane that wasn't camo and military in a long time. When I stepped in there was nothing inside but floor. No seats or carpeting, just aluminum floor. For an in-flight meal they passed out C-rations. There was a whole plane full of very disappointed (read angry) GIs. It must have been a plane that the Department of Defense contracted during the height of the fighting. But everyone was so happy to get out of Vietnam for a while no one walked off the plane.I once picked up a prisoner at Wright-Patterson AFB and had an occasion to eat in one of their chow halls. I thought I died and went to heaven. It even put the Navy chow halls to shame and they were quite good.
Mike
Basically motors and plumbing. I don't remember flying missions without a navigator. Avionics upgrades were after. I last flew ANG E models as their AD advisor.Very roughly:
KC-135A: first iteration, small motors, navigator part of the crew.
KC-135E: engine upgrade and avionics upgrades
KC-135R/T: most recent engine upgrade (nearly same as 737 engines, the CFM-56), better avionics, so no nav. Way overpoweredâŚitâs better. T has slightly different fuel system than R.
Q model had divided fuel system: some for the tanker, and some for the SR-71. They didnât mix internally to the tanker. Today (R and T), tanker can use it all or transfer it all.
Any time you had to walk home from work was a really bad day.We called those guys âZoomies, propeller-heads, and jet jockeysâ. I donât know what they called us. I do know they didnât like me when I got in their airplane with muddy boots. So we all took extra care to get more mud on our boots before getting in a plane. You know - - - those airliners were you sit on the floor because that was the only thing in there.
But seriously their support was awesome. They provided support logistically, tactically, and for intelligence. I always envied those in the military who slept in a nice dry bed and ate food prepared minutes ago as opposed to years ago and stored in a can.
Living 6 miles north of FAFB, I get to see tankers all day. There is a great Washington State vets cemetery just West of Fairchild. I like ride my bike over there and to walk the rows and read about the people.....some of the Navy ranks are hard to figure out without googling. Same when my cruise ship docs at Sitka...I walk to the National cemetery there and pay respects.Very roughly:
KC-135A: first iteration, small motors, navigator part of the crew.
KC-135E: engine upgrade and avionics upgrades
KC-135R/T: most recent engine upgrade (nearly same as 737 engines, the CFM-56), better avionics, so no nav. Way overpoweredâŚitâs better. T has slightly different fuel system than R.
Q model had divided fuel system: some for the tanker, and some for the SR-71. They didnât mix internally to the tanker. Today (R and T), tanker can use it all or transfer it all.
Wow, thatâs an amazing viewLiving 6 miles north of FAFB, I get to see tankers all day. There is a great Washington State vets cemetery just West of Fairchild. I like ride my bike over there and to walk the rows and read about the people.....some of the Navy ranks are hard to figure out without googling. Same when my cruise ship docs at Sitka...I walk to the National cemetery there and pay respects.
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