I was a Security Policeman at Tan Son Nhut AB Viet Nam for a year. Worked Flightline patrol a number of times! Parked my Jeep within feet of the 123's while a buddy was pumping Agent Orange from 50 gallon drums to the spray tanks on the 123's! Stuff was leaking all over the tarmac. But to hear those birds taking off with huge radials and then roar like a jet was amazing. Saw a C119 Shadow Gunship lose a propeller on takeoff at 2300 hours and dive into a swamp just off the AB. All 9 aboard KIA. It was hours before the rescue crews could get close to the impact site due to ammo and flares cooking off! May they all RIP!
I arrived in-country Vietnam December 1970 my first fight was on a C-123 out of Cam Ranh Bay they used the Jet assist on take off to gain altitude, to DaNang Main Air Force Base. I was a Crew Chief on UH-1C Hueys Gunships with the 282nd Assault Helicopter Company Black Cats & Alley Cats 3rd Platoon Alley Cats @ Marble Mountain Airfield, DaNang, Vietnam.
We had 20+ C123k in the Philippines air force right after Vietnam. Jato take off was really a blast. It goes idle on taxi, with the flick of two toggle the jato goes full 100% then hang on.
We had the famous Agent Orange sprayer C-123 called "Patches" at LG Hanscom Field while I was there in the 1970's. We also used them to spray various chemicals over Tinker AFB during one of our fog clearing experiments during the same time frame. One item was so corrosive that when a pipe burst inside the fuselage a fire truck was driven up to the ramp and actually hosed down the inside of the plane. Think about that for a moment. Someone actually approved spraying a chemical that dissolves aircraft over an airfield!! Later over Northern California, we dumped something called "polyelectrolyte" out of a converted DC-3 that made everything so slippery you could hardly walk and that also shorted out all electrical equipment to the point where even the car radios refused to work. It went down into a motel parking lot on the trip home after the experiment ended.
I had one hosed out at Tan Son Nhut after an old man’s bottle of nhuc mam broke on takeoff from Phuc Quoc, and ran across the cargo compartment floor. Fireman went back to the truck for an air pack after he took 2 steps into the cargo compartment.
I was a Flare Kicker out of DaNang in 66. I dropped flares with the 311th Air Commando sq for 3 1/2 months until my boss found out (I was a personnel Specialist (73250) and politely asked me to quit because He did not want to write a letter for a typist. Anyway, I received a DFC, AM (47 missions) & AFCM during those days I flew. I haven't seen once since I left in Dec 66. Loudest engine in the USAF inventory, need hearing aids since then.
One of my best buddies in the Air Force, Loadmaster Sargent Milton Jackson Bush (Milt) was killed, along with the rest of his crew, when their C123 crashed near Bien Hoa Airbase shortly after takeoff after being hit by Viet Cong ground fire in May, 1969. Milt was a Georgia native, a gentleman, and an all around great guy in his 22nd year of life. He had been in Vietnam less than two months. He was a patriot who volunteered for that mission. R. I. P. Milt.
Summer of 1981. Jump School Ft. Benning. My first jump was out of a C-123. Instructors said it was the last time this particular C-123 was going to be used. It was retiring after this flight. They called it the flying boxcar! Scared as all hell; it rattled like a boxcar all right!
Good on you guys! Love the 119 and 123, both are orphan airplanes that need to get more respect. John T Halliday wrote a great book called Flying Through Midnight about flying 123s in Laos.
I volunteer at Castle Air Museum (based out Merced, CA.at the former "Castle Air force Base.") We have one of these on display! it's an awesome aircraft!
My dad's first cousin was a wing commander (?) in Viet Nam for a unit of C123's. His name was Guiher Gene Greenwood. He has been deceased for several years. I sure wish he was around so I could ask him about the units he was in and where in Viet Nam he served.
I remember seeing them flying out of Rickenbacker/Lockbourne in central Ohio in the 70s. To a kid they always looked odd with that raised tail, slow lumbering speed and the sound of their droning engines.
Great video! My dad was a pilot in Viet Nam flying the AC-119 in Phan Rang. He said the 123's were there to spread agent orange. As a kid, I wanted one. :-)
The Ranch Hands (the spray birds) were one squadron that operated out of Bien Hoa. There was a freight squadron at Tan Son Nhut (19th SOS), another at Danang and one or two at the Wing HQ at Phan Rang, near Cam Ranh Bay. During the rainy season, they took the spray tanks out of the spray planes and used them for cargo. I was there.
@Are Dee Westmoreland had left before I got to Nam. We were assigned to base flight and did VIP runs. A Scott Tagg, his father was crew chief while I was there, had developed a web site a few years ago but has pulled it down. He had several shots of the early days in the early 60’s days showing several high profile passengers.
I was a Security Policeman at Tan Son Nhut AB Viet Nam for a year. Worked Flightline patrol a number of times! Parked my Jeep within feet of the 123's while a buddy was pumping Agent Orange from 50 gallon drums to the spray tanks on the 123's! Stuff was leaking all over the tarmac. But to hear those birds taking off with huge radials and then roar like a jet was amazing. Saw a C119 Shadow Gunship lose a propeller on takeoff at 2300 hours and dive into a swamp just off the AB. All 9 aboard KIA. It was hours before the rescue crews could get close to the impact site due to ammo and flares cooking off! May they all RIP!
I arrived in-country Vietnam December 1970 my first fight was on a C-123 out of Cam Ranh Bay they used the Jet assist on take off to gain altitude, to DaNang Main Air Force Base. I was a Crew Chief on UH-1C Hueys Gunships with the 282nd Assault Helicopter Company Black Cats & Alley Cats 3rd Platoon Alley Cats @ Marble Mountain Airfield, DaNang, Vietnam.
We had 20+ C123k in the Philippines air force right after Vietnam. Jato take off was really a blast. It goes idle on taxi, with the flick of two toggle the jato goes full 100% then hang on.
I was a weird kid. Air America was one of my favorite movies and this aircraft along with the Pilatus Porter are some of my favorite aircraft.
Jack McMahon gives a marvelous & intelligent summary.
I was a Coast Guard C-123B Loadmaster on Guam 1969-1970 sure miss those days.
I remember seeing a lot of these flying in and around Vietnam in the 60's. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairchild_C-123_Provider
We had the famous Agent Orange sprayer C-123 called "Patches" at LG Hanscom Field while I was there in the 1970's. We also used them to spray various chemicals over Tinker AFB during one of our fog clearing experiments during the same time frame. One item was so corrosive that when a pipe burst inside the fuselage a fire truck was driven up to the ramp and actually hosed down the inside of the plane. Think about that for a moment. Someone actually approved spraying a chemical that dissolves aircraft over an airfield!! Later over Northern California, we dumped something called "polyelectrolyte" out of a converted DC-3 that made everything so slippery you could hardly walk and that also shorted out all electrical equipment to the point where even the car radios refused to work. It went down into a motel parking lot on the trip home after the experiment ended.
You have to give the government credit for some really creative stupid ideas.
I had one hosed out at Tan Son Nhut after an old man’s bottle of nhuc mam broke on takeoff from Phuc Quoc, and ran across the cargo compartment floor. Fireman went back to the truck for an air pack after he took 2 steps into the cargo compartment.
I was a Flare Kicker out of DaNang in 66. I dropped flares with the 311th Air Commando sq for 3 1/2 months until my boss found out (I was a personnel Specialist (73250) and politely asked me to quit because He did not want to write a letter for a typist. Anyway, I received a DFC, AM (47 missions) & AFCM during those days I flew. I haven't seen once since I left in Dec 66. Loudest engine in the USAF inventory, need hearing aids since then.
Flew in a C-123 from Ohio to Florida during my Air Force ROTC before entering active duty and accumulating 4,300 hours flying the C-130.
One of my best buddies in the Air Force, Loadmaster Sargent Milton Jackson Bush (Milt) was killed, along with the rest of his crew, when their C123 crashed near Bien Hoa Airbase shortly after takeoff after being hit by Viet Cong ground fire in May, 1969. Milt was a Georgia native, a gentleman, and an all around great guy in his 22nd year of life. He had been in Vietnam less than two months. He was a patriot who volunteered for that mission. R. I. P. Milt.
Summer of 1981. Jump School Ft. Benning. My first jump was out of a C-123. Instructors said it was the last time this particular C-123 was going to be used. It was retiring after this flight. They called it the flying boxcar! Scared as all hell; it rattled like a boxcar all right!
Flying Boxcar was the C-119, also called ‘the flying coffin’.
Same here in January 1979. The other 4 jumps were from the C-130 and 141 that felt like Cadillacs in comparison :)
Was a loadmaster from 77_83 at Lockbourne AFB on 123. 356 AS. Good times
Good on you guys! Love the 119 and 123, both are orphan airplanes that need to get more respect.
John T Halliday wrote a great book called Flying Through Midnight about flying 123s in Laos.
Love that my homestate of 35 years (Maryland) had a hand in building this very rugged twin engine transport!
I volunteer at Castle Air Museum (based out Merced, CA.at the former "Castle Air force Base.") We have one of these on display! it's an awesome aircraft!
Flew them in Vietnam was at Castle for the fly in. Thanks for the post.
my dad flew patches in Vietnam back during its first tour he was part of the first group to bring the aerial spray flight to Vietnam
In 1968, this plane took me to the Central Highlands from Saigon.
My dad's first cousin was a wing commander (?) in Viet Nam for a unit of C123's. His name was Guiher Gene Greenwood. He has been deceased for several years. I sure wish he was around so I could ask him about the units he was in and where in Viet Nam he served.
Hello nice video thanks for posting looking to view you next . I like the color saludos
I remember seeing them flying out of Rickenbacker/Lockbourne in central Ohio in the 70s. To a kid they always looked odd with that raised tail, slow lumbering speed and the sound of their droning engines.
Interesting that the AF didn’t want the jet version, then ended up putting jet engines onto the piston version.
At the time jet engines were still "new".... The viewpoint was jets were for bombers and fighters. Recips were for cargo planes
Love the insight into flying it much respect.
Great video!
My dad was a pilot in Viet Nam flying the AC-119 in Phan Rang. He said the 123's were there to spread agent orange.
As a kid, I wanted one. :-)
We did a lot more than spray agent orange!
The Ranch Hands (the spray birds) were one squadron that operated out of Bien Hoa. There was a freight squadron at Tan Son Nhut (19th SOS), another at Danang and one or two at the Wing HQ at Phan Rang, near Cam Ranh Bay. During the rainy season, they took the spray tanks out of the spray planes and used them for cargo. I was there.
Fantastic airplane.
Thanks for sharing. 😉👌🏼
GR8 VID !! 👍
Is there a video of this amazing piece of Machinery in action or flying?
Awesome
Love to see some onboard action
Could a fully loaded Fairchild C-123 Provider maintain height on one engine?
That thing could barely maintain height on two engines :D
Worked on the “White Whale” in NAM 68-69.
@Are Dee Westmoreland had left before I got to Nam. We were assigned to base flight and did VIP runs. A Scott Tagg, his father was crew chief while I was there, had developed a web site a few years ago but has pulled it down. He had several shots of the early days in the early 60’s days showing several high profile passengers.
CARIBOU D H C BATLE HORST 🐴
Did you check that 123 to see if it was oozing Agent Orange?
Was a tough old bird.
Welcome to Con Air.
I have jumped out of it
C-123สมรรถนเยี่ยม
i ve jumped out of one in viet nam
It leaks oil like shive.
Nah, DHC Buffalo/Caribou ;-)
CARIBOU D H C -17 .
FORMIDABLE AIR PLANE !!!🤣🤣🤣🤣
C-123 Polish Wisper Jet. Cessna 172 flies faster.
Never Speed Cessna 172 is Air tortuga .