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"Triple Nickel" By Grant Lannon
The T-6 in the flyby has the buzz numbers LTA-555 is known
as "Triple Nickel” and is an AT-6C. This
T-6 was delivered new from the North American factory in Dallas to the South
African Air Force in 1943 through the Lend Lease program. It remained in South Africa until 1995. While there it was used as an advanced
trainer, gunnery/bombing and air combat trainer, photo ship, weather scout and
target towing aircraft. It originally
had two 30 caliber machine guns on it and racks for 20# bombs and 5 inch Matra
rockets. It was shipped to this country
in a crate after being sold to its first private American owner in 1995. It was reassembled in McKinney, Texas
and went through two other owners before being sold to the present owners three
years ago.
Triple Nickel is in the colors of
the airborne Forward Air Controllers of the Korean War who were known as
Mosquitos. The Mosquitos directed air strikes
by marking targets on the ground with white phosphorous rockets mounted under
the wings of their T-6s and then directing the high speed fighter/bombers onto
the enemy positions. They also carried
an observer in the back seat and had radios which they used to communicate with
the troops on the ground and the Tactical
Air Control
Center to obtain aircraft
for the strikes. Fifty Mosquito pilots
were killed during the war, 31 became prisoners of war, and 12 were declared
missing and presumed dead. The actual
LTA-555 was shot down in May of 1953 and destroyed. The two crewmembers were taken prisoner by
the Chinese and spent three months in captivity before the armistice was signed
and they were freed.
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