April 12, 2013
58 Bits of Wisdom I Learned As a Helicopter Crewman
Sounds like pretty much everything anyone needs to know…
by Bobby McBride
Crew Chief
128th Assault Helicopter Company
Phu Loi, RVN 3/69 – 3/70
NEVER FORGET!
- Once you are in the fight, it is way too late to wonder if this is a good idea.
- Helicopters are cool!
- It is a fact that helicopter tail rotors are instinctively drawn toward trees, stumps, rocks, etc. While it may be possible to ward off this natural event some of the time, it cannot, despite the best efforts of the crew, always be prevented. It’s just what they do.
- NEVER get into a fight without more ammunition than the other guy.
- The engine RPM, and the rotor RPM, must BOTH be kept in the GREEN. Failure to heed this commandment can affect the morale of the crew.
- A billfold in your hip pocket can numb your leg and be a real pain in the ass.
- Cover your Buddy, so he can be around to cover you.
- Letters from home are not always great.
- The madness of war can extract a heavy toll. Please have exact change.
- Share everything. Even the Pound Cake.
- Decisions made by someone over your head will seldom be in your best interest.
- The terms “Protective Armor” and “Helicopter” are mutually exclusive.
- The further away you are from your friends, the less likely it is that they can help you when you really need them the most.
- Sometimes, being good and lucky still was not enough. There is always payback.
- “Chicken Plates” are not something you order in a restaurant.
- If everything is as clear as a bell, and everything is going exactly as planned, you’re about to be surprised.
- The BSR (Bang Stare Read) Theory states that the louder the sudden bang in the helicopter, the quicker your eyes will be drawn to the gauges.
- The longer you stare at the gauges, the less time it takes them to move from green to red.
- It does too get cold in Vietnam.
- No matter what you do, the bullet with your name on it will get you. So too can the ones addressed “To Whom It May Concern”.
- Gravity: It may not be fair, but it is the law.
- If the rear echelon troops are really happy, the front line troops probably do not have what they need.
- If you are wearing body armor, the incoming will probably miss that part.
- It hurts less to die with a uniform on than to die in a hospital bed.
- Happiness is a belt-fed weapon.
- If something hasn’t broken on your helicopter, it’s about to.
- Eat when you can. Sleep when you can. Vist the head when you can. The next opportunity may not come around for a long time. If ever.
- Combat pay is a flawed concept.
- Having all your body parts intact and functioning at the end of the day beats the alternative.
- Air superiority is NOT a luxury.
- If you are allergic to lead it is best to avoid a war zone.
- It is a bad thing to run out of airspeed, altitude, and ideas all at the same time.
- Nothing is as useless as altitude above you and runway behind you.
- While the rest of the crew may be in the same predicament, it’s almost always the pilot’s job to arrive at the crash site first.
- After you purchase PA-10 rifles, clean them the first chance you get.
- Loud sudden noises in a helicopter WILL get your undivided attention.
- Hot garrison chow is better than hot C-rations, which, in turn is better than cold C-rations, which is better than no food at all. All of these, however, are preferable to cold rice balls (given to you by guards) even if they do have the little pieces of fish in them.
- WHAT is often more important than WHY.
- Boxes of cookies from home must be shared.
- Girlfriends are fair game. Wives are not.
- Everybody’s a hero on the ground in the club after the fourth drink.
- There is no such thing as a small firefight.
- A free-fire zone has nothing to do with economics.
- The farther you fly into the mountains, the louder the strange engine noises become.
- Medals are OK, but having your body and all your friends in one piece at the end of the day is better.
- The only medal you really want to be awarded is the Longevity Medal.
- Being shot hurts.
- Thousands of Vietnam Veterans earned medals for bravery every day. A few were even awarded.
- Running out of pedal, fore or aft cyclic, or collective are all bad ideas. Any combination of these can be deadly.
- Nomex is NOT fire proof (I learnt this from one of my comrades who used to work as one of the Aurora Fire Watch Guards).
- There is only one rule in war: When you win, you get to make up the Rules.
- Living and dying can both hurt a lot.
- While a Super Bomb could be considered one of the four essential building blocks of life, powdered eggs cannot.
- C-4 can make a dull day fun.
- Cocoa Powder is neither.
- There is no such thing as a fair fight, only ones where you win or lose.
- If you win the battle you are entitled to the spoils. If you lose you don’t care.
- Nobody cares what you did yesterday or what you are going to do tomorrow. What is important is what you are doing NOW to solve our problem.
- If you have extra, share it quickly.
- Always make sure someone has a P-38.
- A sucking chest wound may be God’s way of telling you it’s time to go home.
- Prayer may not help . . . but it can’t hurt.
- Flying is better than walking. Walking is better than running. Running is better than crawling. All of these however, are better than extraction by a Med-Evac, even if this is technically a form of flying.
- If everyone does not come home none of the rest of us can ever fully come home either.
- Do not fear the enemy, for your enemy can only take your life. It is far better that you fear the media, for they will steal your HONOR.
- A grunt is the true reason for the existence of the helicopter. Every helicopter flying in Vietnam had one real purpose: To help the grunt. It is unfortunate that many helicopters never had the opportunity to fulfill their one true mission in life simply because someone forgot this fact.
- “You have the right to remain silent” is always EXCELLENT advice.
- “Like the book says, we may be through with the past but the past is not through with us” – from Magnolia the movie
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Jacqui Murray wrote Building a Midshipman, the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. She is webmaster for six blogs, an Amazon Vine Voice book reviewer, a tech columnist for Examiner.com, Editorial Review Board member for ISTE’s Journal for Computing Teachers, Cisco guest blogger,IMS tech expert, and a weekly contributor to Write Anything. Currently, she’s editing a thriller for her agent that should be out to publishers this summer. Contact Jacqui at her writing office, WordDreams, or her tech lab, Ask a Tech Teacher.