I am sick. I watched every minute and wondered all the time, is the Crew Chief an A+P? A pilot at least? What double checks are made on critical assembly tasks; or did they have that luxury in 1943? How many were assembled in this manner? Who came up with the steps, the manual, the video? Loved the narration. Love the old timey music and 'presentation'.
I am sick. I watched every minute and wondered all the time, is the Crew Chief an A+P? A pilot at least? What double checks are made on critical assembly tasks; or did they have that luxury in 1943? How many were assembled in this manner? Who came up with the steps, the manual, the video? Loved the narration. Love the old timey music and 'presentation'.
I am sick. I watched every minute and wondered all the time, is the Crew Chief an A+P? A pilot at least? What double checks are made on critical assembly tasks; or did they have that luxury in 1943? How many were assembled in this manner? Who came up with the steps, the manual, the video? Loved the narration. Love the old timey music and 'presentation'.
Had to do that once in Mexico. We didn’t have any Mongolians around so we used short Mexicans and everything was ground assembly then swing into place. Building the foundation and accurately pointing the dish were the only real concerns.Thoroughly enjoyed watching this, I was especially impressed how the crate was used and re-used throughout to assemble it.
Way back when I had to erect two 3.8m satellite dishes in Mongolia with no crane or ladders. Involved lots of short Mongolians standing on crates to get the dishes assembled!
If I had the time, I could watch all those old warbird films for weeks on end. It's bad enough viewing some of the posts of the films here, then getting sucked in to watching the rest of the series and what ever associated links there are to follow.
Read Bob Hoover's book, "Forever Flying". He talks a bit about doing this. If I understand it correctly, he played a bit more than a small part in getting those birds put together and flying in Africa.
Ha ha I had the Mongolians pour the base before I got there but didn't trust them to sink the bolts exactly right so drilled and epoxied them myself.Had to do that once in Mexico. We didn’t have any Mongolians around so we used short Mexicans and everything was ground assembly then swing into place. Building the foundation and accurately pointing the dish were the only real concerns.
When you're at war, there's a different bar to be crossed. When the first Gulf War started, my submarine pulled into port at about 5 pm, did a full torpedo load out and was underway again by morning. Handling anything explosive at night? Absolutely forbidden. Unless it's war time and then you can do it.