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Picture of Vemo
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This site may have been posted here before- however, well worth revisiting. If you haven't seen it before it's a photo journal of a young mans journey through Alaska in a Super Cub. Its every pilots dream. Too bad the Cub killed him.


http://shaunlunt.typepad.com/


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Posts: 318 | Location: 40N,105W | Registered: 01 February 2006Reply With Quote
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Stall-spin. As old as aviation. Killed Tommy McGuire in the Pacific in WW II. Fantastic photos and a great adventure. Too bad he forgot where he was.
 
Posts: 11729 | Location: Florida | Registered: 25 October 2006Reply With Quote
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I was told the Cub was one of the safest planes in the sky. It could just barely kill you. guess it's true.

Jerry Liles
 
Posts: 531 | Location: Louisiana | Registered: 01 January 2010Reply With Quote
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I flew one up there and had a great time. Just wasn't my time to die, I guess, because it was an adventure every second. Damn, I'd like to do it again.


JudgeG ... just counting time 'til I am again finding balm in Gilead chilled out somewhere in the Selous.
 
Posts: 7763 | Location: GA | Registered: 27 February 2001Reply With Quote
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Damn you Vemo. I lost an hour of my day because of you. Also wound up wishing I was single and had no ties. Don't get me wrong, I love my family, but I still feel like I've got a few more adventures in me.
 
Posts: 3628 | Location: cajun country | Registered: 04 March 2009Reply With Quote
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I can relate dan! Riding my mare today I was adding up what the damage would be to take a 3 month alaska super cub safari. The ledger wasn't very long when it hit 6 figures!
Not sayin it wouldn't be worth it....
What's the fuel burn on one of those, anyway??


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Posts: 318 | Location: 40N,105W | Registered: 01 February 2006Reply With Quote
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Thomas B. McGuire's last mission

On January 7, 1945, McGuire was leading a group of four P-38s - himself, Major Jack Rittmayer (four victories), Captain Edwin Weaver (two victories) and Lieutenant Douglas Thropp (one victory) - on a fighter sweep over northern Negros Island in the central Philippines. Their aim was to gain victories. McGuire desperately wanted to pass Major Richard Bong's score of 40 kills. Descending through cloud cover, McGuire’s flight circled a Japanese airfield at Fabrica and then proceeded to a second airstrip at Manapla (also referred to as Carolina). As they approached Manapla, they were confronted by a lone Ki-43 Hayabusa (“Oscar”), which immediately engaged McGuire's flight.

Flying in the number-three position, Lt. Thropp saw the Oscar trying to attack him in a head-on pass. Thropp instinctively broke hard left. The Japanese pilot turned with him and fell into position behind him while firing. Major Rittmayer, flying as Thropp's wingman, turned sharply towards and began firing on the attacker. McGuire saw that the Oscar was being engaged by Rittmayer and turned to face an imminent threat to the flight from the opposite direction. Unfortunately for McGuire and his flight, the Japanese pilot, Warrant Officer Akira Sugimoto, was an instructor pilot with some 3,000+ hours in that type of aircraft. He broke away from Thropp and Rittmayer and turned to find McGuire and his wingman Ed Weaver directly in front of him. Sugimoto was easily able to catch up and attack them from behind.

As Sugimoto approached Weaver from behind, Weaver radioed he was attacked and cut inside of the turn to present a more difficult shot. McGuire eased up on his turn rate in an effort to draw the attacker off of his wingman and onto himself. Sugimoto took the bait and switched his attack to McGuire. As Sugimoto approached from behind, McGuire rapidly increased his turn rate. This extremely dangerous maneuver, performed at only 300 ft (90 m) above the ground, caused McGuire's P-38 to stall. It snap-rolled to an inverted position and nosed down into the ground. He was killed on impact. At the start of the dogfight, McGuire had radioed to keep their auxiliary fuel tanks, as they would need them to reach their main objective in the sweep. Many P-38 pilots believe that this order, which was contrary to standard operating procedures, was the cause of McGuire's death. The auxiliary fuel tank added extra weight and encumbered the aircraft, making it less maneuvereable and more prone to stall and spin at low speeds.

After McGuire's crash, Thropp caught up to Sugimoto and fired on him causing enough damage that he had to make a forced landing a few miles away from where McGuire crashed.

Less than a minute later, another Japanese aircraft, a Ki-84 Hayate (“Frank”) piloted by Technical Sergeant Mizunori Fukuda, appeared from the nearby airstrip at Manapla and attacked Major Jack Rittmayer in a head-on pass. Rittmayer's P-38 disintegrated from cannon shots and pitched down into a river. Rittmayer was killed on impact. Captain Weaver observed Fukuda's attack and fired at Fukuda, severely damaging his aircraft. Fukuda later crash landed at Manapla, where his fighter was destroyed. Thropp's P-38 was slightly damaged in the action and trailed smoke from one engine. Weaver and Thropp returned to Dulag, Leyte.

McGuire's crash was witnessed by Filipinos who immediately rushed to the scene and secured his body so it would not be captured. In 1947, his remains were recovered and returned to the United States. He was buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery.
Memorial on Negros Island, Republic of the Philippines, for Major Thomas B. McGuire

A memorial stands at McGuire's fatal crash site on Negros Island as a tribute to one of America's greatest fighter pilots.
 
Posts: 16534 | Location: Between my computer and the head... | Registered: 03 March 2008Reply With Quote
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