anyway lets back track a little. this job came about through a contact i knew, the company that leases aircraft to the United Nations were looking for pilots and this is how i got the job, after going through the necessary paper work, signing a waiver(i guess in case i get shot down!) and being trained in how to operate small arms i was off from New Zealand to africa to take up my assignment. this is how i got to be looking at my new bird in this weather.

well time to meet my co-pilot and crew, Stan is my co-pilot, an English man of 32, nice bloke seems to know the a/c well and he is going to be giving me my introduction flight. i have Sam who is the load master and Nigel who helps out around the a/c, basically where ever he is needed (officially he is the engineer).
My intro flight is to Bor - Sudan, a little grass strip in the middle of no where, i will soon learn that all the strips are in the middle of no where. Stan gets the bird in to a nice climb and we settle for a nice flight.

By the time we land the weather has cleared and we are bathing in hot sunshine, very humid though.

Unloading is done in what seems to be minutes, with the freight loaded on to trucks and the trucks disappearing into the jungle surrounding the strip. we are given a warning that there are militia on their way to us. One of the many perils Stan informs me, at this time he also tells me that i have the return leg. He had left two engines running just as a precaution in case something went wrong, apparently Stan leaves all the engines running when in hostile areas like this, but we have a company director overseeing my first flight so everything is done by his book, rightly or wrongly!

Right in to the hot seat, i fire up the remaining two engines, Sam closes the doors and gives us the ok for take off. I power up the engines, checking the temps and so on, all are stable so off we go, just in time too, as Sam informs us on the intercom that the militia have just arrived. we get into the air just as the bullets start flying our way.
i get the bird in to a max angle climb, but they have brought the big guns out and we get hit a few times, nothing too major, apart from the fuel leaking out of our tanks

just as we level out number 1 engine decides that it doesn't want to run smooth, turns out we got hit in that engine on climb out. so i shut it down and feather the prop just as a precaution.

once reaching cruise and out of the way of those nasty bullets, a quick check reveals that the crew is fine, the company director has gone white as a ghost and the fuel situation is ok, even with the tanks leaking, it has only been the reserves that have been hit,

Our cruise is only short lived and then it is time to descend , the nasty buggers must have informed their colleges that we were on our way back as there was a welcoming committee waiting for us in the jungle. they got a few more shots on to us, that was before the UN troops on the ground got to them. the few shots they got off takes out our hydraulics

on finals we informed Juba control that we would be landing on three and that we had lost hydraulics (must have got them with their last volley), luckily i had lowered the gear and some flaps before the hydraulics were taken out.
WE got the bird on the ground quite safely, apart from running over the end of the runway as the brakes decided that it was a good time to go on holiday. no damage done to the a/c, well no more that what was done by gun fire, opened everything up and got out of there as quick as we could.

post flight briefing was held, the company director gave a warm review of our flight crew performance, and said he would be more than happy to fly with us again, Sam had been given a report by the ground engineer, basically it read like this:
Engine one hit by ground fire, oil lines damaged, no visible damage to engine, but will require replacement, just to be sure, both left and right fuel tanks had been hit, with fuel leaking from aux tanks, will be patched on site, hydraulics was hit once, which rendered them inoperative, he reckoned he could fix it here. there were a few big holes in the r/h rear of the a/c, nothing a bit of sheet metal and paint wouldn't fix he reckoned. i saw the holes and thought that they would require more than that, but hey, I'm new here!!
Once briefing was complete, it was off to Sam's for a quite beer to unwind.
looks like the a/c will be out of action for a day or two, or at least until they get a new engine in, so looks like i will be flying a different bird for a day. and so ends the first day of my new job, not exactly boring!!


maybe the same for ya Herc
.......... hecks looks like a 23mm got there real fuse , lucky it missed the control cables


























































































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