The Cold War
In
1957 I was a young Air Force staff sergeant, flight engineer, flying
the propeller-driven KC-97G air-refueling tanker out of Lockbourne
(now Rickenbacker) Air Force Base.
The
USAF began operating the KC-97 in 1950. It purchased a total of 816
tankers from Boeing.The KC-97 used piston
engines,
fueled by aviation
gasoline,
but it carried jet
fuel
for its refueling
mission. It therefore used independent (transfer valves) systems for
both types of fuel, and was able to transfer its avgas 145 to
off-load to the receiver in an emergency. (known as a SAVE) These
tankers were vitally important to the world-wide B-47
Stratojet
strategic operations. An example was the support of Arctic
reconnaissance flights from Thule
Air Base.
The
Really Cold, Cold War
I
had had
been playing inter-service, inter-base football that fall in addition
to with my flying duties. In November my squadron was tasked by the
Strategic Air Command to deploy to Greenland to provide air-refueling
support for the air reconnaissance mission, keeping an eye on
Russia’s Arctic activities.
Thule
Air Force Base Greenland as described by a former veteran of the
base: “March was our windiest month. However, we had to be cautious
all year long because the wind could come down off of the ice cap at
anytime and in minutes be blowing dangerously hard. I only saw it
blowing up to 100 mph once during the year I was there. That only
lasted a few hours, but the wind-chill factor was -110 Fahrenheit.
Everyone just stayed wherever they were whenever something like that
happened.”
The mission: A reconnaissance pilot’s
experience: “Lappo refueled his RB-47E over the vast wastelands of
the Arctic, but could not zero in on his primary target once he
penetrated Soviet airspace because of thick cloud cover.”
Flying
in the Arctic is totally different from operating in more comfortable
climes. We had to heat the aircraft and engines for two hours prior
to starting the engines for a flight that would last up to eight
hours.
On
the first mission, I was amazed when the navigator, after about two
hours flying time, stated over inter-phone, “Abeam the North Pole.”
We, along with the four other ships in our formation, flew on for two
more hours before contacting our receivers, two jet-powered
reconnaissance aircraft.
After
offloading fuel, we turned and headed back to Thule with just enough
fuel to make it home. If the runway was closed for any reason, such
as a crashed aircraft, the alternate landing field was on the sea ice
that in winter could easily support the plane.
One
mission stands out in my memory for its moment of terror. To complete
the long refueling missions over the Pole, we had to carry aviation
fuel in the air-refueling tanks in place of the jet fuel normally
carried.
The
jet-powered bomber receivers could operate on aviation fuel with a
slight loss of range. To use this fuel source, the tanker’s engines
had to be isolated from the pressure pumps that normally furnished
fuel. The gravity feed from the refueling tanks was a tenuous
operation, with flickering fuel-pressure warning lights the norm.
Arctic
navigation in those pre-INS/GPS days relied on celestial navigation
because magnetic compass systems were near useless that close to true
North.
When
the crew navigator needed to take a sextant shot, the refueling panel
with the fuel valve-control switches had to be swung back. I warned
the navigator to be extra careful to not touch the switches, He
misunderstood me and said
“These switches?” and promptly closed the fuel-source valves.
Dead
silence! All four engines quit and the aircraft’s nose tipped down
into the perpetually dark winter Arctic night. The boom operator
standing behind me shouted, “Get it, Paul, get it!” The pilot
tuned wide-eyed in my direction with a question mark over his head,
or so it seemed. I tuned the fuel-source switches to the pressure
mode, and all four engines backfired and roared back to life.
Perpetual
Arctic Winter Sky
The
entire event took only a few seconds but at the time it seemed to
take minutes. We completed the mission and the only reminder of the
event was my twisted and torn seat-cushion cover.
On
the ice cap near the base was a reminder of the dangers of the
mission. An RB-47 recon plane was scrapped due to being hit several
times by Russian MIG cannon fire.
After
our hundred-day deployment was completed and our replacement squadron
was in place, the unit headed home to the mild Ohio winter.
I
was thankful that I had the experience of operating in a harsh
environment, but I wouldn’t want to do it on a regular basis.
Note:
The KC-97 and me eventually ended up at Clinton County Air Force Base
in1962 and we worked for the Ohio
Air National Guard until 1974.
Paul
Hunter