Bell AH-1 Gallery

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Turkish Army AH-1 Cobra, 2014
Cobras escort a CH-47 Chinook in April 1971 as it carries commandos into Laos.
Combining a “white team” OH-6 scout (center) with “red team” Cobras creates the “pink team,” here, looking for trouble near Phuoc Vinh in 1969.
AH-1Q firing TOW anti-tank weapon
AH-1W BuNo 165045 / YM40 and AH-64D Apache
AH-1S
AH-1T

Bell 206A / OH-58 / TH-67 / 406 Gallery

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Agusta Bell 206A Jet Ranger
Agusta Bell 206A Jet Ranger
Bell 206B JetRanger II ZK-HMN
Bell 206B JetRanger II ZK-HGH
JetRanger
JetRanger
OH-58 Kiowa
Kiowa cockpit
AB-206A modified into an Agusta-Bell AB.206B JetRanger II OO-SKE (c/n 8331)
Bell 206A Jet Ranger OO-ADM (c/n 8077)
Bell 206A Jet Ranger OO-CDP (c/n 8046)
Bell 206B JetRanger III ZK-HMM, pilot Eddie McGregor, about to lift Hughes 269A ZK-HED
Wanganui Aero Work JetRangers, Palmerston North, New Zealand 1986
JetRanger ZK-HLH – pilot John Anderson
Bell 206L

Bell UH-1 Gallery

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UH-1D 70+54 of HTG-64, Ahihorn A/B, Sept 1984
UH-1D 72+26 of HFS-10, Neuhausen A/B, June 1987
Bell UH-1D 71+56 of LTG-61
UH-1N
The last minute rescue by Bob Caron, Air America helicopter pilot and CIA contractor employee O.B,Harnage (reaching for the people) before the North Vietnamese overran Saigon on 29 April 1975, on the Pittman Apartments in downtown Saigon, where CIA employees were housed.
A Shau Valley. Vietnam, 1969
Operation Lam Son 719, 12 February 1971
UH-1H

Bell UH-1 experience

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Official US Government records show that between 1962 and 1973 a total of 1,211 UH-1 aircraft were lost in combat in Vietnam. John B. Morgan was the pilot of one of these aircraft and was flying for the 4th Infantry Division Aviation Battalion at the time.

I was shot down on 15 February 1967. At that time my unit had been in-country about 40 days and operational only about two weeks. I was a WO-1, a Warrant Officer, flying co-pilot for Major Charles A. Neal, the 1st Platoon Leader. Our mission that day was to reinforce a battalion of US infantry who were surrounded and under heavy fire by the NVA. Ours was the second attempt that day, the first having been unsuccessful due to the intensity of ground fire.

We were flying fifteen UH-D slicks, organized in five ‘Vs of three’ in trail formation. Each V of three had about a 30-second interval as our landing zone was only large enough to accommodate three aircraft. We had picked up units of the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry at a ‘PZ’ about ten miles south of the ‘LZ’. Major Neal and I were flying the lead ship and had five Pathfinders aboard who would co-ordinate communications upon successful insertion.

The LZ was about 75 yards in diameter, surrounded by 60- to 80-foot trees and heavy brush. The American unit was dug in around the perimeter, leaving the center open and clear for landing helicopters. As we approached from west to east the artillery prep was shut off and the last round marked by smoke, as per SOP (standard operating procedure). At that time our two pairs of UH-1C helicopter gunship escorts started their race-track firing pattern and our door gunners were told to open fire. The gunships were firing 2.75-inch diameter folding fin air-to-ground rockets with nine-pound high-explosive warheads and quad flexible M-60s into the area surrounding the LZ.

Needless to say, this 22-year-old co-pilot in the lead ship, on his first ‘hot’ combat assault, was not the only one present with sweaty palms! As we started our deceleration and approach the noise was impressive.

Bell 47 Gallery

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H-13D
Bell 47H
B.E.A Bell 47B-3
Bell H-13G / 47G
Bell 47J
Johnson Flying Service Bell 47B-3 flown by Johnson Chief Pilot Jack Hughes – 1949
Agusta-Meridionali EMA.124
Bell 47G-3B2A ZK-HFU
Bell 47G-4A ZK-HDF
Bell 47G-3B2 ZK-HDK
Bell 47G-3B1 ZK-HDG
Bell 47G-4A ZK-HDF
Bell 47G-4A ZK-HFE
Bell 47G-2 ZK-HAE
Bell 47G-3B1
Bell 47G-3B1
Bell 47G-3B1
Bell 47G-3B1
Bell 47G-3B1
Bell 47G-3B1
Bell 47H
Bell 47G-3B2 ZK-HDK
Bell 47G-4 ZK-HBD
Bell 47G-4 ZK-HAX
Bell 47G-3B ZK-HAY
Bell 47J
Bell 47G-4A ZK-HDD
Bell 47G-3B2A ZK-HFU
Bell 47G-3B2A ZK-HFU
Bell 47J-2 ZK-HGO
Bell 47G-2A
NZ3712 and NZ3710 No.3 Sqn RNZAF
Feb 2007 – Re-enacting a 1999 incident where Bell 47G-3B-1 VH-YEP was hijacked at gun-point at (the same) pilot forced to help a prisoner escape from Sydney’s Silverwater Goal.