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Willie just told me about this John Crocker posting and looking it has brought back a flood of memories. I started going to Reno in 72 and sitting in the grandstands wondering what it would be like to crew an unlimited. Race 6 was kept at Mike Bogue's Power Pac Engineering company at Oakland airport. I started hanging around Mike's hanger and fianally he put me to work on some of the warbirds there. In 85, I was asked to join the crew on Race 6 "Sumthin Else" My dream had come true and the "icing on the cake" was the to be able to work besides the likes of Kerch, Mike Bogue, Ted, and Willie. The friendships I've made through air racing are priceless to me. I have have never had so much fun working so hard. Luckily our crew has stayed together when Race 6 was damaged in Washington in 1990. Tom Camp was in need of a crew for his Yak-11 and we've been with Tom for 20 years and counting. Race 6 was sold after John's death and was restored back to a TF-51D and now flies as Crazy Horse 2. It is great to see some of the race mods off Race 6 still gracing the skies
Thank you for walking us down Memory Lane. Post some more picture's
One huge problem with Races away from Reno is trying to figure out the course, and crucially the Race start. At Reno everybody knows the landmarks and can find the pylons (well -- most of the time, anyway). Get to a place like Minter Field North of Bakersfield California where everything is flat and everything looks the same from the air and you have a very limited time to get it straight -- well, you get the idea...
Here we have Frank Sanders trying to explain his idea about how to start the race to John Crocker, Ron Hevle, and Bob Love. This is real important to Bob Love, as he's gonna be the Pace Pilot, and if things get screwed up everybody's obviously going to blame him...
Not to digress but does anyone remember the argument Bob Love and Bob Hoover had over race freq one year concerning clouds on the chute?
Hoover was pace and balling out Love for being low and out of position. Love was saying he was in bad vis higher up and it wasn't safe. Went on all through the start. I can't remember if he called him a DNS or let it go.
It was fun to watch Love fly, he was so smooth.
He was also one of the few I saw 3-point a mustang. When he landed it was done flying.
Well, in this case the tables were turned on Bob. This time he had to be the pace, and he had everybody muttering at him. He decided to start the Race a very long way out -- presumably to have some spacing as the Racers hit the course. What they got, however, was some absolutely unholy speeds as they passed Home and tried to bank into pylon 1.
Pace pilot tends to be a no-win situation...
Back to the above discussion, Bob ended up looking quite perplexed. Ron just continued to look like a movie director's idea of what a Race Pilot should look like.
IMHO, it is no more 'restored' in it's current state than it was as a racer.
Well it does look a lot better that it did after the accident in Washington. John did not have the funds to fix the aircraft. So, it just sat. The crew thought about tearing into it, but the crew chief, Mike Bogue did not want to have the aircraft scattered about the hanger in pieces until we had the funds to finish it. Of course, our wish would have been for her to stay as a racer. But at least, she's back in the air where she belongs.
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