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NAMVET72
03-15-2012, 10:55 AM
Captain Bob Pardo (with back-seater 1st Lt Steve Wayne) and wingman Captain Earl Aman (with back-seater 1st Lt Robert Houghton) were assigned to the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing, 433rd Tactical Fighter Squadron, at Ubon Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand. In March 1967, they were trying to attack a steel mill in North Vietnam just north of Hanoi.

On March 10, 1967, the sky was clear for a bombing run, but both F-4 Phantom IIs were hit by anti-aircraft guns. Aman's plane took the worst damage; his fuel tank had been hit, and he quickly lost most of his fuel. He did not have enough fuel to make it to a tanker aircraft over Laos.

To avoid having Aman and Houghton bail out over hostile territory, Pardo decided to try pushing the airplane. Pardo first tried pushing the plane using Aman's drag chute compartment but turbulence prevented this from occurring.

Next, Pardo tried to use Aman's tailhook to push the plane, the Phantom having been originally designed as a naval aircraft equipped with a heavy duty tailhook for landings aboard aircraft carriers.

Aman lowered his tailhook and Pardo moved behind Aman until the tailhook was against Pardo's windscreen. Pardo told Aman to shut down both of his J79 jet engines, as Aman was nearly out of fuel and the engines interfered with Pardo's plan. The push worked, reducing the rate of descent considerably, but the tailhook slipped off the windscreen every 15 to 30 seconds, and Pardo would have to reposition his plane. Pardo also struggled with a fire in one of his own engines and eventually had to shut it down. In the remaining 10 minutes of flight time, Pardo used the one last engine to slow the descent of both planes.

With Pardo's plane running out of fuel after pushing Aman's plane almost 88 miles, the planes reached Laos airspace at an altitude of 6000 feet. This left them about two minutes of flying time.[2] The two pilots and their backseaters ejected, evaded capture, and were picked up by rescue helicopters.[4]

Although Pardo was initially criticized for not saving his own aircraft, he and Wayne eventually received the Silver Star for the maneuver, albeit nearly two decades after the incident


This is truely a Brave Man that Cared for his Friends and fwllow Aviators.......


Clyde

ColMike
03-15-2012, 07:14 PM
This is truely a Brave Man that Cared for his Friends and fwllow Aviators.....

amen

AutoMag
03-15-2012, 07:42 PM
That is a fantastic story Clyde!!!:)

Riverpigusmc
03-15-2012, 09:31 PM
Good job by all involved. Good thing they weren't flying helicopters

Snipersnest
03-17-2012, 03:09 PM
Great story. We flew into Udon on an R5D, and we stole everything that wasn't nailed down, and flew back to Chu Lai. The Air Force guys had no clue!