Depati Amir
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Jakarta I will be flying 450km today! lots of sea, lots and lots of Java sea in all its seaness. Bad flashbacks from the Whangarei to Norfolk flight,.... well at least it's not that long. O.K got ya togs? lets go!
C-123 Provider
Great weather for the heat of the monsoon season. My initial intentions were to head to Singapore but then i found out about Mount Kerinci. That was until i read a little more about Jakarta and other places nearby the capital. So now we are heading almost backwards as we go south to Jakarta. It will be the biggest airport yet! More than one runway is big! Quite a good looking v.c inside, very impressive.
The C123 was responsible for some nasty work in Vietnam, responsible for dropping agent orange on our troops.
We head south and climb to 20,000ft to get a good look at where we are going.
Maximum speed: 228 mph (198 knots, 367 km/h) with jets
Range: 1,035 mi (899 nm, 1,666 km) combat
Service ceiling 29,000 ft (8,800 m)
Rate of climb: 1,150 ft/min (5.8 m/s) without jets
Wing loading: 49 lb/ft² (240 kg/m²)
Power/mass (prop): 0.077 hp/lb (130 W/kg)
U. S. Air Force Vietnam War Medal of Honor Recipient Lt. Col. Joe M. Jackson
In May 12, 1968, Lt. Col. Joe M. Jackson landed his C-123 Provider on a special forces camp airstrip that was being overrun by hostile forces in South Vietnam. Despite intense enemy fire, Jackson rescued a three-man combat control team, earning the Medal of Honor.
When the Vietnam War began, Jackson found himself piloting a C-123 Provider on 298 combat sorties in his third war. The special forces camp at Kham Duc, South Vietnam was tucked away in the central highlands, 16 kilometers from the Laotian border. After the fall of Camp Lang Vei during the Tet offensive in February, Kham Duc was the only observation camp remaining in I Corps, the northernmost military district in South Vietnam. When Kham Duc came under heavy mortar attack on May 10, Army Gen. William Westmorland ordered it evacuated.
On May 12, a heavy fog hung over the camp, obscuring enemy movements in the surrounding hills. An Army CH-47 helicopter and two Air Force C-130s tried to land and takeoff with personnel, but were disabled by enemy fire. One C-130 burst into flames at the end of the runway, killing the crew and more than 150 Vietnamese civilians. Finally, a C-130 was able to land and takeoff with some passengers.
That afternoon, a C-123 took off from Da Nang, bound for Kham Duc. Jackson was at the controls, along with Maj. Jesse Campbell, Tech. Sgt. Edward Trejo and Staff Sgt. Manson Grubbs, his crew. As he circled at 9,000 feet in a holding pattern, the scene below was one of increasing devastation as the Viet Cong moved closer to the camp's 4,000-foot airstrip.
Hostile forces had overrun the forward outpost and established gun positions on the airstrip. They were raking the camp with small arms, mortars and automatic weapons. The camp was engulfed in flames and ammunition dumps were exploding and littering the runway with debris. In addition, eight aircraft had been destroyed by the intense fire and one remained on the runway, reducing its usable length to only about 2,200 feet. To further complicate the landing, the weather was deteriorating rapidly. As the last C-130 was about to takeoff with the last of the men on the ground aboard, the airborne commander ordered jet fighters circling overhead to descend and destroy the camp. It looked as if Jackson's aircraft wasn't going to be needed in the rescue attempt. But then the radio crackled, informing them that the three-man combat control team, in charge of directing the evacuation, was still on the ground. As they searched the camp for anyone who had been left behind, they realized they were the only ones left.
One C-123 attempted to land, but enemy fire intensified and it was forced to accelerate for take off without finding the men. Jackson and his crew began their dive from 9,000 feet at a rate of almost 4,000 feet per minute. Jackson realized that if he reversed his propellers to stop the aircraft, he would shut off the two auxiliary engines he needed for a quick escape. Instead, he jammed on the brakes and skidded halfway down the runway. As it turned in the direction to be able to take off, the three men jumped from a culvert next to the runway and leaped into the open cargo door in the rear. At that moment, from the edge of the runway came a 122 mm rocket, fired from just outside the perimeter. The men watched as the shell skidded along the asphalt, broke in half and stopped only 10 meters from the plane. It did not explode. Jackson taxied around the shell and applied full power, taking off under heavy fire from the hills on either side. The plane had been on the ground at Kham Duc for less than a minute.
On Jan. 16, 1969, President Lyndon B. Johnson presented the Medal of Honor to Jackson. Now that would be something to see!
C-123s are sometimes used in movies where scenes call for large cargo aircraft, e.g. Air America and xXx. A C-123 was the main setting for the action film Con Air, as well as Operation Dumbo Drop, and was featured in a 2007 television commercial for Ford pick-up trucks which supposedly showed their braking power. The Provider even had a small scene in Tomorrow Never Dies, as James Bond prepares to jump into the South China Sea.
A whole lotta clouds and nothing else.

"O.k son, you wanna come up and see what the pilots see, well how about that?", "what's that mister?", "oooh now, don't touch that, that keeps this ol' tin girl up in the air!"," One day Mister i wanna be just like you!", " a ha ha ha! o.k! o.k! run along now son, and have a good flight!",....... "Jenkins, have a look in that book and find out what that part's for". I think i have seen too much t.v
William Westmoreland, an American General and responsible for alot of the operations in Vietnam flew around in a Provider. It was named the White Whale.
I'm looking forward to getting to Jakarta. It has a population of 8.75 million.
Coming into Jakarta, i was hit by this wall of fog. I haven't been very lucky lately with my landings, It's either fog or rain. I can imagine a flight attendant coming around "fog or rain? What would you like?", "hmmm choices, choices,...i ....think i 'll have ...the......... fog today!", "Sure, here you are sir!"
Base turn coming in for finals, flaps check, speed check, throttle down and lining up. Yay! Here comes the biggest airport yet!
As i land i see all sorts from the familar to the not so familiar. Garuda, Lion and Batavia are classics around here.
It's hard to concentrate when there is so much happening. This is a big airport.Planes were coming in, taking off, taxing here and there.
Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. As you can see, she is huge!
Yo V.I.P!
The seatbelt signs are off, you can now step outside into the wall of heat! Anybody who had been to Indonesia knows what that is like! BOOF! Have a nice day!