The Ac-130
Posted by xxjaltruthxx@reddit | aviation | View on Reddit | 49 comments
Recently got engaged at the museum of the USAF, while there saw Azreal, their AC-130 on display. I’ve don’t plenty of research, however noticed that this particular AC-130 had twin Bofors, anyone know what model it was and maybe have some footage of it in use? I mean I love the 105 and much as the next guy but, twin 40’s come on man!
CannonAFB_unofficial@reddit
I spent 7 years of my career flying gunships. It was during the rise and height of ISIS. Pretty unreal time to be a gunship dude.
wunderkit@reddit
I was a Nav on an ECM aircraft (EB-66) in Vietnam. We would sometimes support AC-130s if their missions took them into range of suspected SAMs. Back then, I remember the streams of fire coming out of them at night. I thought they had a gatling gun of sorts., but I guess things change in fifty odd years. It was a challenge to keep in range of them in a two engine jet bomber with a high stall speed.
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
I’m a maintainer on 135’s met a few AFSOC guys down range, makes me wish sometimes that I would have went that direction
CannonAFB_unofficial@reddit
I was a CSO on AC-130s and then a pilot on KC-135s. As far as I know, I’m the only one and the only tanker pilot with an AFCAM. I know of 3 booms that used to be gunship gunners but since AFSOC is such a small community, we all know each other.
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
That’s awesome man, if you’re still in, probably catch ya on a red ball down range some day!
Lonely_Programmer_42@reddit
There is a video of the plot and her story about her crew
The One Woman The Taliban Feared Most "The Angel of Death" | Allison Black
Zootguy1@reddit
lol love the camel markings
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
This plane has to have a story
rhit06@reddit
FlakyShark@reddit
“Heroic” atrocities 😇
MandolinMagi@reddit
Unless the Iraqis surrendered, killing them is perfectly legal.
Amadeus_1978@reddit
Killing retreating enemy troops is not an atrocity.
unstable_nightstand@reddit
Holy shit, that plane caused the Highway of Death: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_of_Death
ThrowTheSky4way@reddit
Participated in* a lot of the heavy lifting done on the highway was cluster bombs and JDAMs. An AC-130 couldn’t cause nearly that much carnage by itself especially against armored targets
27803@reddit
No Jdams they didn’t exist
alienXcow@reddit
JDAMs? Not in 91 there weren't
health-dental@reddit
Btw it’s not in the Quran.
America, the land of the ignorant racists.
aviation-ModTeam@reddit
Racism
BigmacSasquatch@reddit
In the quaran, Azrael is referred to as Malaikat al-Maut.
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
HOLY SHIT, this crew was something else, dude thanks!
i8TheWholeThing@reddit
Camels for Iraq and one crab for Haiti.
euph_22@reddit
I think in the Gulf War (the 1991 one) they were used for to indicate combat missions.
Though historically they were used in WWII in the China-Burma-India theater to indicate transport flights over the "Hump".
SmoothTyler@reddit
My dumb ass nearly responded with "Dude, they definitely weren't flying AC-130's in WWII, what are you on about?"
rhit06@reddit
They were just off camera at the bottom of this image (can see it better here is a crab too. Representing Operation Uphold Democracy in Haiti in 1994/5
ODX_GhostRecon@reddit
As if it needs loudencers. 🙄
Huugboy@reddit
Why do they have loudeners on them?
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
Extra scare factor
Taptrick@reddit
It’s pretty wild to brag about being the angel of death. I know people in the military are meant to be warriors but still, I wouldn’t advertise it so overtly. I guess with a gunship like this there is no hiding it, it can just be embraced for what it is.
FlakyShark@reddit
Getting downvoted for saying murder plane is for murder 🤨
Kaiisim@reddit
I had a friend who worked for military intelligence during afghanistan and his job was to look at the aftermath of a spectre mission and try and count the body parts of insurgents to work out how many they killed. He'd have to count up all the heads, legs, arms and try and get a body count.
I can't imagine much that's more terrifying, the ground just exploding around you constantly for minutes.
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
Just got play Call of Duty MW2, while a game yes, nothing was more terrifying than hearing those rounds incoming on wastelands or derail
devoduder@reddit
This post makes me sad. In 1990 I was a ROTC cadet with a navigator track and got to spend two weeks with the 16th SOS at Hurlburt.
I had the honor to fly with all the crew members who were onboardSpirit 03 and lost over Iraq in 1992. I think about them every day.
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
Best we can do is remember their sacrifice and strive to avenge and move forward
phovos@reddit
So we are clear when you are an invading warrior you are justifiably a target, lol. There is no vengeance to uphold; they were justly killed for their actions; may the pilots flying sorties on Yemen civilians soon understand the situation.
phovos@reddit
Avenge? How did the AC130 raining death not deserve to die? What a weird outlook; warriors know what they are you don't need to lie about it.
virginia-gunner@reddit
Well in to the 1990's, USAF AC-130 crews using the 40MM BOFORS platform were using up 40MM HE rounds from World War 2. I attended a DRMO auction in Florida and there were hundreds of crates of 40MM once fired cases that had WW2 dates. All were deformed or shredded and sold for scrap.
IncompententAdmin@reddit
immediately thought of this.
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
Yep….still waiting for the AC-17, twin 155mm’s
Veryhappycommission@reddit
Is this a plug and play for my cassna?
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
If only haha
Sparks_PC_Building@reddit
I wish I could post photos in the replies. But Robins AFB in warner robins, GA has 2 Spectres. They have one of the ones that were outfitted with 2 40mm Bofors, specifically air-cooled versions. It was an option they went with in Vietnam because the guns were available from the Naval bases. Ammo was plenty, everyone had parts, and they were, and arguably still are, one of the beat weapons platforms out there. These flying cancer tubes became very deadly utilizing the 40mills.
what should be photos of a Spectre with 40s
The_Hydro@reddit
b o f o r s d e e z n u t s
B3West@reddit
Gunship evolved over the years. Starting with C-47, C-119 then C-130s
AC-130A: 1968
AC-130H: 1969
AC-130U: 1995
The first A model I saw was in Panama 1989. The Reservists were there for training. And took part in the fighting
Unlike the F-16s. Which left around in the morning. About 8 hours after the war started. Which just left the A-37s
AC-130W: 2012
AC-130J: 2017
rhit06@reddit
Congrats!
If you don’t mind sharing I’m curious where the proposal happened? Near any particular plane/which hangar.
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
Cold War, right in front of the B-2, her favorite plane. At first she didn’t know about the fact that they had one on display, however I forgot my knife in my pocket and while I was storing it she found a map. Still managed to pull it off albeit a slightly modified plan!
rhit06@reddit
Cool spot (slight pun on this B-2 having the “Fire and Ice“ testing nose gear art).
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
It was a great weekend l, spent near the entire day at the museum and airsoft in Willard the next day
xxjaltruthxx@reddit (OP)
And here I thought I knew a lot about war and planes!
jerryswrath@reddit
The plane that brought democracy to Iraq