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Reviewed by "Bondo" Phil Brandt
FirstLook |
On a cold 1970
winter day at Madrid’s Torrejon Air Base, Boy Nav Bondo hopped off his C-133A in
mid-mission to take a westbound C-141 jump-seat back home to Dover AFB, Delaware,
there to prepare for a short notice move to TAC recce fast movers. In my
excitement to join the “down-in-the-weeds-with-your-hair-on-fire” community a
continent away at Mountain Home Air Patch, Idaho, I never looked back to
properly reflect on the faithful, little-known Douglas airframe that had carried
me safely throughout the world for fifteen hundred hours in eighteen months.
Although it’s now been thirty-five years since these unique heavy haulers went
away sans fanfare to the AMARC “chop shop” in Tucson, retired navigator Cal
Taylor’s lovingly-written tome (420 pages!) brings back so many memories to this
curmudgeon that my departure might as well have been yesterday.
Cal has divided this hefty book into some twenty-four chapters, leading the
reader from post-WWII airlift development through design and flight test of the
C-133, aircrew training, squadron organization–there were only three units, two
at Dover and one at Travis–maintenance difficulties, Vietnam operations, crashes
and incidents and, finally, civilian usage; yes, as recently as 2004 there still
seemed to be an operational Weenie Wagon in Alaska!
For readers not familiar with the C-133, imagine the ubiquitous C-130, and then
enlarge it by roughly fifty percent! For almost all of its fifteen year
operational career, just fifty of these giant birds fulfilled the heavy airlift
requirements of the Department of Defense. That’s right, just fifty were built,
and now comes the really tough part: nine were lost, and one was wiped out in a
ground incident. Even so, Cal points out that the type’s overall safety record
compared favorably with those of other USAF aircraft. Statistics or no
statistics, the aircraft became somewhat of a PR disaster and was grounded at
least two times in the first few years of flying. In fact, when I related to one
person that I had been a C-133A aircrew member, the guy exclaimed, “Wow, and
you’re still alive!” A little MAC black humor digression: in the flight planning
room at Wake, the C-133 fuel manual had been inscribed on the cover with a cross
and “For Underwater Use, see MAC Manual____” . You see, less than two years
prior, a Weenie Wagon was lost on takeoff there, killing the entire crew, the
wreckage settling into water fourteen hundred feet deep.
The most enjoyable sections of the book are the personal aircrew accounts and
fourteen pages of color plates. In the interests of full disclosure, Bondo’s
recollections are included among those tales. My favorite color pic is a photo
of the famous-but-long-gone Drifters Reef at Wake. The rustic, Gilligan’s
Island-type aircrew bar was located right on the beach of the inlet that flowed
in from the vast Pacific to the lagoon where Pan Am had moored its legendary
Boeing Clippers seven decades ago. One could carry a wooden lawn chair right to
the water’s edge and sip a cool one while watching sea birds and beautiful ocean
sunsets. Some of us had the numbers on the video jukebox memorized. I especially
remember “Monday, Monday” and the hot French babe who would perform some of the
onscreen numbers. A “small world” story: We were buying our carryout liquor
ration at the Wake Class VI store when I noticed that an aircrew member standing
in line in front of us looked strangely familiar. I approached him, and we both
did a shocked double-take; it was a high school classmate and friend who was
flying reserve 130s. We hadn’t seen each other since graduation, twelve years
prior.
Cal covers the crashes/losses/incidents that plagued the 133 fleet in great
detail, giving the reader the proper respect for the uncertainties and danger
that stalked each airlift mission. “Hours of boredom interspersed with moments
of stark terror” was the watchword, such as when all four props would
inadvertently go into “fixed pitch” and the resultant horrendous torque needed
to turn them as the aircraft descended to thicker air would flameout the T34
engines, just like lugging your stickshift vehicle up a hill in forth or fifth
gear.
Although flying TAC fast movers was so much more exciting to Bondo than MAC “bus
driving”, I couldn’t agree more with Cal’s statement that airlift operations
taught us invaluable self-reliance. When you, as the nav, haven’t had a good
position–what’s an Inertial Nav System??--fix for hours, and you’re DR-ing on a
twelve-hour leg over the night vastness of the North Pacific from Kadena to
Midway, with NO alternate airfields, and the aircraft commander asks you “Where
are we?,” you simply pound your fist on the chart and say, “Here.” Of course,
the “footprint” of said fist covers an area of about five hundred square miles!
Reading the names of C-133 aircrew members, some of whom this curmudgeon hadn’t
thought of in over three decades, made me happy, sad, and wistful all at the
same time. We had a common task, served with pride out in the MAC “system” and
enjoyed the company our fellow 133 pukes in a small, tight-knit flying “club”.
Cal Taylor has done a masterful job in creating a fitting biography of this
little-known and little-remembered one-time centerpiece of USAF airlift. It’s
difficult to envision any future work that could flesh out the C-133 in more
detail. We ex-Weenie Wagon troops are greatly indebted to him. Highly
recommended!
Highly Recommended.
Thanks to Willy Peeters and Daco for the review sample.
Review Copyright © 2006 by Phil Brandt and posted with his permission.
Remembering an Unsung Giant: The Douglas C-133 Cargomaster and Its People
By: Cal Taylor
Firstfleet Publishers
Olympia, WA
Softbound
$34.95 for 2nd printing, plus S&H and sales tax for WA addresses
Despite playing a significant role in military cargo transportation, the Cargomaster has been somewhat overlooked, with few references available for the modeler or aviation enthusiast alike. This abundant soft cover volume covers development, operations and the type’s retirement fro the military airlift role.
Cal Taylor, a former C-133 navigator, blends records and statistics with crews’ personal recollections to offer the complete reference on the largest turboprop to be accepted by the USAF. Aside from flying a variety of MATS missions around the globe, the C-133 was designed to carry ICBMs, and in fact the last C-133B models incorporated rear clamshell doors that would accommodate completely-assembled Titan missiles.
For modelers, the book is filled with numerous useful illustrations, including operations and maintenance close-ups, line drawings of landing gear, cockpit photos, cutaways and several nice company paintings of the C-133. Company plans and profiles can be found on two of the [eight] fold-outs provided in the book.
As there are only four kits available of this large airlifter, and all of them vacuform, it is still unlikely that it will ever be realized in an injection molded kit. I was pleased, however, to find an insert that offers a limited re-release of the fairly comprehensive Gene Hooker 1:72 kit that had been available in the 1980s.
This definitive guide for the Cargomaster is available from the publisher at : http://www.angelfire.com/wa2/c133bcargomaster/home.html.
Lee Coll
May/June 2006 IPMS Journal
(Posted with the kind permission of Lee Coll)
A brief review by Paul Schmidt, April 2007
I have just completed reading of your book, "Remembering an
Unsung Giant", and want to thank you for the very evident hard work that you put
into it. I
don't think I have ever read another book on a single aircraft that was so
comprehensive and at the same time so readable. I have always had an
interest in the C-133, as it usually appears in those few aircraft museums that
have one without so much as a shred of explanation about its history or
use, yet it so obviously has a very interesting background. Thanks to you, I can
honestly say that all my questions have been answered. Kudos!
Paul Schmidt
(Posted with permission of Paul Schmidt)
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