I really hope there wasn't anybody still in that other chopper... and I really wouldn't want that kind of debt...

Moderators: Bookworm, starkruzr, MrFireDragon, PrettyPrincess, Wapsi
zachariah wrote:If Sali does why did she carry the written notes? One telling should have been all she needed. But considering it's sali writing it down would be a good idea. lol.
Famous last words there Kathy. Said by Custer, the captain of the Titanic, Bill Clinton, and Monica to Jin on finding an island.Atomic wrote:"What could go wrong?"
Cue clown car, mimes, and elephant stampede.
You do know who pays for those machines, right?Leak wrote:...she pays off that damage for the rest of her life...
I really hope there wasn't anybody still in that other chopper... and I really wouldn't want that kind of debt...
Julie, about Wapsi Square wrote:Oh goodness yes. So much paranormal!
And so does the Navy get by with flying fighters because they aren't rigid fixed wing aircraft? If so, that seems like kind of a technicality. It all also seems to me that it would lead to a lot of needless redundancy of training facilities and command. Not to mention aircraft orders and parts and the personnel to go along with it. I guess each branch wants absolute authority over everything possible.Boxilar wrote:I hate to be "that guy"' but only the Army operates the Apache for the US. The Marines still use the AH1 Cobra, and the Air Force is barred from using attack helicopters. There was a huge argument in 1947 when the Air Force split of from the Army. The AF argued that they alone could fly armed aircraft, while the Army countered that they needed armed helicopters. In the end, the Army can field rotor winged attack aircraft, while the Air Force only flies fixed wing combat aircraft. The Air Force gets a by on defensive armament like door guns. Of course, Kath may have served with the Israeli Air Force field Apaches as well.
The dig was twenty years ago.zachariah wrote:Now Kathy was in the Air Force??? I am surprised. After the dig tramua I cannot see how the AF would even accept her as a recruit. Unless she was in before she went to college. That would make her in her late twenties at the dig site. SO it wouldn't have been that far in the past as we originally thought. Her career must have been in choppers as well. What she had Sali do is not common knowledge on how to power up and use the weapons system with the helmet.
Sali did not expect the big bang. What will she do now?
Q: What's the difference between an elephant and a gallon of milk?Wyvern wrote:zachariah wrote:If Sali does why did she carry the written notes? One telling should have been all she needed. But considering it's sali writing it down would be a good idea. lol.
You've been reading the last few weeks. Would you send Atsali out without written notes?
You could send her to the store for milk; she'd return with bananas and goats.
Things were weird about that time. The Navy and Marines were thier own entity, but the Army Air Corps desperately wanted a divorce from the Army. Add in the fact that everyone thought the next war would be nuclear, and Curtis LeMay and Co got what they wanted. The newly formed Air Force had no real interest in fielding close support air craft when the Russians were going to be lobbing hydrogen bombs at us with giant bombers. The Army successfully lobbied to keep armed helicopters for close support work.KnightDelight wrote:And so does the Navy get by with flying fighters because they aren't rigid fixed wing aircraft? If so, that seems like kind of a technicality. It all also seems to me that it would lead to a lot of needless redundancy of training facilities and command. Not to mention aircraft orders and parts and the personnel to go along with it. I guess each branch wants absolute authority over everything possible.Boxilar wrote:I hate to be "that guy"' but only the Army operates the Apache for the US. The Marines still use the AH1 Cobra, and the Air Force is barred from using attack helicopters. There was a huge argument in 1947 when the Air Force split of from the Army. The AF argued that they alone could fly armed aircraft, while the Army countered that they needed armed helicopters. In the end, the Army can field rotor winged attack aircraft, while the Air Force only flies fixed wing combat aircraft. The Air Force gets a by on defensive armament like door guns. Of course, Kath may have served with the Israeli Air Force field Apaches as well.
The Air Force/Army thing arises from the vicious political in-fighting around the Air Force splitting off from the Army.KnightDelight wrote: And so does the Navy get by with flying fighters because they aren't rigid fixed wing aircraft? If so, that seems like kind of a technicality. It all also seems to me that it would lead to a lot of needless redundancy of training facilities and command. Not to mention aircraft orders and parts and the personnel to go along with it. I guess each branch wants absolute authority over everything possible.