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F6F vs a pair of F-89s, true story


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The Battle of Palmdale

On the morning of 16 August 1956, Navy personnel at Point Mugu prepared an F6F-5K for its final mission. The

aircraft had been painted overall high-visibility red. Red and yellow camera pods were mounted on the wingtips. Radio

remote control systems were checked, and the Hellcat took off at 11:34 a.m., climbing out over the Pacific Ocean. As

ground controllers attempted to maneuver the drone toward the target area, it became apparent that it was not

responding to radio commands. They had a runaway. Ahead of the unguided drone lay thousands of square

miles of ocean into which it could crash. Instead, the old Hellcat made a graceful climbing turn to the southeast,

toward the city of Los Angeles. With the threat of a runaway aircraft approaching a major metropolitan area, the Navy

called for help. Five miles north of NAS Point Mugu, two F-89D Scorpion twin-jet interceptors of the 437th Fighter

Interceptor Squadron were scrambled from Oxnard Air Force Base. The crews were ordered to shoot down the rogue

drone before it could cause any harm. Armed with wingtip-mounted rocket pods and no cannon, the Scorpion was typical

of the Cold War approach to countering the "Red Menace." Each pod contained 52 Mighty Mouse 2.75-inch rockets. Salvo-

launched, the Mighty Mouse did not have to have precision guidance. Large numbers of rockets would be fired into

approaching Soviet bomber formations to overwhelm them with sheer numbers. Today, they would be used against a

different kind of red menace. At Oxnard AFB, 1Lt. Hans Einstein and his radar observer, 1Lt. C. D. Murray, leapt into their

sleek F-89D. Simultaneously, 1Lt. Richard Hurliman and 1Lt. Walter Hale climbed into a second aircraft. The interceptors

roared south after their target. The hunt was on. Einstein and Hurliman caught up with the Hellcat at 30,000 feet,

northeast of Los Angeles. It turned southwest, crossing over the city, then headed northwest. As the Hellcat circled lazily

over Santa Paula, the interceptor crews waited impatiently. As soon as it passed over an unpopulated area, they would

fire their rockets. The interceptor crews discussed their options. There were two methods of attack using the fire control

system, from a wings level attitude or while in a turn. Since the drone was almost continuously turning, they selected the

second mode of attack. In repeated attempts, the rockets failed to fire during these maneuvers. This was later traced to a

design fault. The drone turned northeast, passing Fillmore and Frazier Park. It appeared to be heading toward the

sparsely populated western end of the Antelope Valley. Suddenly, it turned southeast toward Los Angeles again. Time

seemed to be running out. Einstein and Hurliman decided to abandon the automatic modes, and fire manually. Although

the aircraft had been delivered with gun sights, they had been removed a month earlier. After all, why would a pilot need

a gun sight to fire unguided rockets with an automatic fire control system? The interceptors made their first attack run as

the Hellcat crossed the mountains near Castaic. Murray and Hale set their intervalometers to "ripple fire"the rockets in

three salvos. The first crew lined up their target and fired, missing their target completely. The second interceptor unleashed a salvo that

passed just below the drone. Rockets blazed through the sky and then plunged earthward to spark brush fires

seven miles north of Castaic. They decimated 150 acres above the old Ridge Route near Bouquet Canyon. A

second salvo from the two jets also missed the drone, raining rockets near the town of Newhall. One bounced

across the ground, leaving a string of fires in its wake between the Oak of the Golden Dream Park and the

Placerita Canyon oilfield. The fires ignited several oil sumps and burned 100 acres of brush. For a while the

blazes raged out of control, threatening the nearby Bermite Powder Company explosives plant. The rockets also ignited a fire in the vicinity of Soledad Canyon, west of Mt. Gleason, burning over 350 acres of heavy brush. Meanwhile, the errant drone meandered north toward Palmdale. The Scorpion crews readjusted

their intervalometers and each fired a final salvo, expending their remaining rockets. Again, the obsolete, unpiloted, unguided,

unarmed, propeller-driven drone evaded the state-of-the-art jet interceptors. In all, the jet crews fired 208 rockets without scoring

a single hit.The afternoon calm was shattered as Mighty Mouse rockets fell on downtown Palmdale. Edna Carlson was at home

with her six-year-old son William when a chunk of shrapnel burst through her front window, bounced off the ceiling, pierced a

wall, and finally came to rest in a pantry cupboard. Another fragment passed through J. R. Hingle's garage and home, nearly

hitting Mrs. Lilly Willingham as she sat on the couch. A Leona Valley teenager, Larry Kempton, was driving west on Palmdale Boulevard with

his mother in the passenger seat when a rocket exploded on the street in front of him. Fragments blew out his left front tire, and put numerous

holes in the radiator, hood, windshield, and even the firewall. Miraculously, no one was injured by any of the falling rockets. Explosive

Ordnance Disposal teams later recovered 13 duds in the vicinity of Palmdale. It took 500 firefighters two days to bring the brushfires under

control. Oblivious to the destruction in its wake, the drone passed over the town. Its engine sputtered and died as the fuel supply dwindled. The

red Hellcat descended in a loose spiral toward an unpopulated patch of desert eight miles east of Palmdale Airport. Just before impact, the drone

sliced through a set of three Southern California Edison power lines along an unpaved section of Avenue P. The camera pod on the airplane's right

wingtip dug into the sand and the Hellcat cartwheeled and disintegrated. There was no fire.

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YEah DT, I saw that yrs ago, and I think they had a series of books. The pix of Einstien in the cockpit of what looks like a Tornado is kinda neat.

Gotta protect the public from the dangers of an old WW2 fighter, so let's salvo dozens of 2.75s all over a populated area.

I have the Air and Space mag that has that story in it. It was a clear indication of the over confidence in missle/rocket/radar armament back then. The shoulda fired an unguided Genie nuke missle, since it would go into oblivion like the rockets and never come down. I wonder if anyone in ADC ever heard of proximity fuses.

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