Fleet Air Arm jiggery pokery
Ich bin ein Prooner.
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Home of the Full Monty.
Posts: 511
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Fleet Air Arm jiggery pokery
Hello Chaps & Chapesses
Can anyone help please? I am trying to find details of an event that I'm sure I read about ages ago. The essence of the tale is that a R.N carrier, (in a harbour somewhere like Malta) was turned 180% about by having aircraft (back in the propeller era) stationed at either end of the flight deck, all lashed down, and facing into the centre of the ship, and given the signal, all applied power and gradually the ship turned on its axis. It might well be someone was shooting a grog-inspired line. If anyone could throw some light on this I would be obliged.
Thank you. N.Z.
Can anyone help please? I am trying to find details of an event that I'm sure I read about ages ago. The essence of the tale is that a R.N carrier, (in a harbour somewhere like Malta) was turned 180% about by having aircraft (back in the propeller era) stationed at either end of the flight deck, all lashed down, and facing into the centre of the ship, and given the signal, all applied power and gradually the ship turned on its axis. It might well be someone was shooting a grog-inspired line. If anyone could throw some light on this I would be obliged.
Thank you. N.Z.
Definitely not a grog-inspired line! The manoeuvre is called the 'Pinwheel' or 'Windmill' and I have heard of it done by prop aircraft but not jets. In the early 1980s. the 20,000 tonne Australian carrier HMAS Melbourne was docked by, ISTR, 6 Grumman Trackers on a boiling hot day when Melbourne tugboats were on strike. The aircraft were lashed down at opposite ends and the crews set power according to orders from the bridge. There is a first hand account of it in this book:
https://melbournebooks.com.au/produc...ten-in-the-sky
There is a fictional account of a Windmill in one of James Mitchener's shorter books, The Bridges at Toko Ri, which would indicate that it was in use by the USN. Also portrayed in the movie.
The exercise was not popular among the squadrons due to the prospect of overheating engines but being the navy, the ship always came first.
https://melbournebooks.com.au/produc...ten-in-the-sky
There is a fictional account of a Windmill in one of James Mitchener's shorter books, The Bridges at Toko Ri, which would indicate that it was in use by the USN. Also portrayed in the movie.
The exercise was not popular among the squadrons due to the prospect of overheating engines but being the navy, the ship always came first.
Last edited by Captain Dart; 17th Jan 2022 at 02:08.
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Australia OZ
Age: 75
Posts: 2,577
Likes: 0
Received 52 Likes
on
45 Posts
Seven Page PDF about PINwheeling&Dealing with PORT, featuring HMAS Melbourne in MELBOURNE, Port Phillip Bay on the DAY. “10 Dec 1980 Ship departs Melbourne. Operation Pinwheel was carried out by [VS] 816 Squadron [S-2E/G] Trackers as the Tug boats were on strike.” HS 817 Sqdn Diary Excerpt
Last edited by SpazSinbad; 17th Jan 2022 at 04:14. Reason: + JpgLEG & anotherie + txts
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Hanging off the end of a thread
Posts: 32,894
Received 2,833 Likes
on
1,210 Posts
Fargo, thanks for the clip, beautiful aircraft and shots of carrier ops. I found The Bridges at Toko-Ri was one of the better American war movies, the tragic ending a nice change from those of John Wayne winning WW II on his own.