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The Further Adventures of Alan Lowther
(Armourer)
We left Alan selling up his car and motorbikes at RAF
Coningsby before his posting to the Far East
Hong Kong (July 1960 to January 1963)
July 1960. Arrived at Gatwick on a bright, sunny July morning in plenty
of time for the flight. Had plenty of time for a coffee and a look around
then found myself standing next to Paul McCartney and Jane Asher in the
bookstall!! Eventually the flight was called and we boarded the British
United Airways Britannia for the long flight to Hong Kong. The aircraft
seemed very comfortable (at this stage!) and the first leg was to Ankara
in Turkey where we disembarked while they refuelled etc. The second leg
was to Colombo in (then) Ceylon but we were diverted to Karachi because
of bad weather. On disembarking I thought it was rather warm and then
noticed that with the aircraft parked nose into a strong breeze we were
walking through the hot gas off the engines. On clearing the aircraft
it was just as hot and turned out to be 130F in the shade! The airport
terminal left something to be desired, I went to the toilet and was confronted
by a hole in the floor and two strategically placed footmarks! Of interest
was a line of Indian Air Force (Navy?) Attackers/Sea Hawks parked in front
of the terminal building. The next leg was to Bangkok and we arrived just
as dawn was breaking and disembarked into a very warm and humid atmosphere.
By now I had lost track of time so it was a case of eating when you felt
hungry and sleeping when you could. We were soon airborne again on the
final leg to Hong Kong where we arrived late afternoon in brilliant sunshine
and a temperature in the mid-90's F. The approach and landing were interesting,
downwind between HK island and Kowloon and the final approach over Kowloon
old walled city and onto the runway which had been built out into the
bay using a lot of the mountain they had cut down on what was now the
final approach. Total time from Gatwick was 29 hours including stops and
overall the flight was very smooth. I don't know what altitudes we were
flying at but I do remember, on the Karachi - Bangkok leg, the crew flying
around the huge cumulus clouds along the route.
The first couple of days are a blur - after sleepy Lincolnshire this place
is packed with cars, buses, taxis and people and keeps going 24 hours
a day.
We had the weekend to recover from the flight and reported to SHQ on the
Monday morning to pick up our arrival chits. Into the SWO's office and
told to report immediately to the Station Armoury to pick up a rifle and
then to report back outside SHQ for Guard of Honour drill. There were
four of us new arrivals and we were on the Guard of Honour party (which
did all ceremonial occasions, including funerals) for the duration of
our tour. Incidentally, this was the first time I had been on parade since
I left Halton. Once the drill was over we completed our arrival and reported
to our respective sections.
The armament section was run by a WO and a Sgt and the rest were distributed
between 28 Sqdn (which comprised 6 Venom FB 4's and 2 Vampire T 11's)
and 2nd Line servicing. The Sqdn armament side was run by a Sgt and a
Cpl (John 'Taff' Davis, ex-81st). The rest of the troops looked after
Aircraft 2nd Line servicing, bomb dump and the various bays in the armoury
for ejection seats (2F and 3B), 20 mm guns, Mk 5 belt feed mechanisms
and small arms. I was allocated to 2nd line aircraft servicing (single
occupancy post) that included squadron technical support. We didn't have
many 'troops' and as the squadron carried out air to ground firing every
Friday it was a case of all hands to the pumps with the exception of the
WO and Sgt in the Armoury and the Bomb Dump crew (2) who kept us supplied
with 3 inch rockets and ammunition. That gave us 7 personnel on the line
to handle the turnarounds and the re-arms, one of these being the man
on the end of the runway for plugging/unplugging. Additionally, one person
had to do range duty with a couple of Chinese to set up targets, radio
contact with the aircraft and range safety launch etc.
On Mondays after air firing I doubled up in the armoury servicing all
the guns and BFM's for the next Friday's firing. This was after I'd removed
all the guns from the aircraft and fitted the ballast sets so Mondays
and Tuesdays were busy days. We had quite a lot of stoppages and mainly
these were caused by worn out aircraft mountings and old worn out guns.
Eventually we ordered new guns and refurbished all the aircraft mountings
which improved things to the extent that we were only experiencing stoppages
due to link pile-ups on the gun bay doors. One of the pre-air firing briefing
items was the procedure to follow when the aircraft returned from a sortie,
this being that the responsible armourer would roll underneath the aircraft
and inspect the link chutes prior to dropping the gun bay doors. If you
didn't and there was a link pile-up, when the doors were dropped you would
fire one or more rounds (dependent on the number of link pile-ups). We
only managed to do it once, courtesy of an ex-HAA J/T who shall be nameless,
and luckily no one was hurt. The 3-inch rocket side of the firing was
a problem for the aircrew as we were plagued by slow burners, which meant
that the rockets were launched from the rails after the aircraft had pulled
up from the attack. The squadron CO wasn't too happy and signals were
flying back and forth between RAFHK and FEAF HQ in Singapore. Eventually
FEAF agreed to come down and witness some ground live firings from a rig
on the range. I designed and built a test rig and set it up on the range.
We took a total of 12 rocket motors complete with concrete heads to represent
the various lot numbers. Needless to say we proved our point, the shortest
delay after firing being 3 secs and the longest being 5 secs. Quite interesting
after pressing the firing button to watch the motor sat there smoking
before finally disappearing out over the ocean with an almighty roar.
Every motor failed the test so all the lots were blacklisted and we eventually
received new ones. We also used to take the 20 mm guns to the range for
butt testing when required. The range was patrolled by one of the Marine
Craft range safety launches (RSL) while firing was in progress and when
we were finished the Chinese used to appear like magic and start diving
to recover the brass cartridge cases.
The Venoms and Vampires lasted until August 1961 when the Venoms were
scrapped (bar one, WR497 'F') which was put on display outside the Airport
Fire Station. The T.11's were fitted with long-range tanks and flown to
Singapore and I have no knowledge of their fate after that. In the meantime
there were one or two incidents and events of note. WR497 'F' was being
flown by Fl/Lt 'Dink' Lemon on an air test when the engine top cowling
detached and removed all of the tail plane from between the booms. Despite
being told to abandon the aircraft he landed safely and was awarded the
AFC. In the meantime the aircraft was impounded and there was much talk
of Courts Martial by the JEngO and we weren't allowed near the aircraft.
I had fitted the top cowling and it was over signed by the Cpl Eng Fitter
so it was he that was to be Court Martialled. Eventually we managed to
get at the aircraft and, lo and behold, all four over-centre latches from
the top cowling were still attached to the hooks on the airframe, so it
must have been a metallic failure of the top cowling rather than a servicing
error.
The SEngO was informed and all talk of Courts Martial ceased. We repaired
the aircraft and it flew again until August 1961.
We had a new Squadron CO arrive and after a couple of rides in the T.11
off he went in one of the FB.4s. About 50 minutes later we have an alert,
the aircraft can't get the wheels down. The civil airport didn't like
it when there was a possibility that the runway would be blocked by the
RAF when they had scheduled flights to land/take off (diversions were
some hours flying time away). Anyway, the Venom appeared in the circuit,
minus the tip tanks, and made a wheels-up landing. We lift it with the
crane, operate the gear down selection, gear comes down OK and we clear
the area. Question: where are the tip tanks? I don't know says CO, I didn't
jettison them. To cut a long story short, the gear up/down lever was the
same colour and very close to the tank jettison lever - need I say more.
We eventually recovered the tanks from a village some miles out on the
final approach.
We shared the (only) hangar with the RHKAAF who flew Austers and a couple
of Dragonfly helicopters. They also had a (non-flying) Spitfire stored
in the hangar, Mk 24 I think, a relic of headier days. Several of their
staff were seconded RAF personnel, one of whom was Cpl Moss who was I
recall ex-77th engines. He used to maintain the Chief Medical Officer's
Austin Healey 100 and spent a lot of his time hurtling up and down the
tarmac after tuning. We met up again at St Mawgan. The Army Air Corps
were based at a little airfield called Sek Kong, which was up country
and quite close to the Chinese border. They flew Auster AOP 9s and occasionally
the Venoms would be detached up there for exercises. Our main contact
however was social as we used to go up there for games evenings. My first
visit was quite early on in my tour and we were drinking bottled San Miguel,
after a few I remarked that I felt a little drunk but that I had only
had five bottles and was told that they were litre bottles, not pints.
Normally, at Kai Tak, I used to drink Tiger and it came in pint glasses.
The local social life was pretty good and you could go downtown at any
time seven days a week to eat and drink. We used to go across to HK Island
on Friday nights to Wanchai Road, which had about 80 bars. The idea was
to have half a pint in as many bars as possible and, needless to say,
I got legless every Friday night and we never did complete all 80 bars.
We did vary the starting point from week to week, top end, middle, bottom
end but the end result was always the same and the best we ever did was
about 28 bars. After the drinking we would usually finish up at some Chinese
street food stall just to finish off the evening (morning?).
Most sports were available at Kai Tak and I carried on playing football,
being selected twice to play for RAF HK against teams from FEAF. I also
took up sailing, which I carried on until 2000 both in dinghies and big
boats. RAF KT had a fleet of Redwing dinghies which were a Cornish designed
clinker built 14 ft boat with a 250 lb cast iron centre plate raised and
lowered on a pulley system. It was an excellent sea boat and we regularly
went on weekend camping expeditions to various places around the colony.
Sometimes the swells were so big that you couldn't see the top of the
mast of the leading boat when it went into the next swell. Later on (1961)
the RAF club bought eight Enterprise kits from UK and these were built
by the Chinese boat boys employed by the club. I attained my Class 'A'
helm certificate and was allocated my own boat so most weekends were spent
on (or in) the water.
The FEAF sailing championships were held in Singapore every year at Changi
or Seletar and I travelled to two of these. Conditions were very different
to HK and we were sailing different boats (Snipes) so we never did very
well but the sailing and the social side were brilliant. All the other
HK clubs eventually bought Enterprises (Army, Navy and RHKYC) so there
were special events held for them at the various club meetings when about
30 boats mustered. The RAF club inaugurated the Enterprise Trophy, which
was a solid silver model Enterprise and was sailed for at the RAF club.
The first time it was sailed for I won the 'cash' race in the morning
and got a rocket from the Commodore for showing my hand. "They'll
all be watching you this afternoon", he said. He was right and I
only managed to finish second after a battle with an Army Captain who
was more intent on stopping me than catching the leader and eventual winner,
a guy from the RN club.
The RHKYC regatta in 1961 coincided with a typhoon due to hit the island.
The arrangement was to get all the boats towed over in the morning by
one of the marine craft launches and then back again at the end of the
day. Due to a heavy night the night before helm and myself arrived late
and missed the tow. We decided to sail across, despite the wind which
was really blowing hard, so we rigged the boat, put two reefs in the main
and off we went. Out of Kai Tak bay to the end of the runway, round the
end then down the harbour towards RHKYC. When we got out by the end of
the runway it was really blowing hard and turned into a beam reach down
the harbour. At that stage of my sailing career I had never gone so fast
in a boat as we planed all the way down the harbour. We screamed past
the RHKYC in a cloud of spray to cheers from the people assembled on the
balcony (there were no other boats on the water) sailed into the moorings
and moored up to be greeted by our Commodore (S/Ldr Eaglesham). "Very
impressive", says he, " if a little foolhardy, consider this
a severe b********g, and by the way the regatta is cancelled because of
the wind conditions". Needless to say we were towed back.
At this time the Ark Royal was on a visit and her aircraft, Scimitars,
Gannets and helicopters were operating from KT. The typhoon was due to
make a direct hit so all the aircraft had to be put in the hangar. We
managed to squeeze them all in, mainly due to the folding wings on the
Scimitars and Gannets. There was a visiting Beverley, which we lashed
down outside the end of the hangar and anything that couldn't be put away
was lashed down to rings set into the concrete apron. Most of the civilian
aircraft left the airport and one of the last to leave, late in the evening,
was a USAF DC3. By this time the weather was really atrocious, low cloud,
heavy rain and storm force winds.
The DC3 departed towards Lyemun Gap and, unfortunately, made his right
turn too early and ploughed into the high ground on the west end of the
island killing all sixteen on board. The mountain rescue team were called
out in the early hours and eventually found the wreckage. Many other people
were killed in this typhoon, including several hundred Chinese mainly
due to landslips engulfing their homes on the hillsides. Seven RAF personnel
also died on Lan Tao island when the building they were sheltering in
collapsed. There was also major damage to buildings, cars and vessels.
According to reports the maximum-recorded wind speed was 240 mph. All
the military aircraft and equipment survived and we were back flying in
a couple of days in brilliant sunshine. The funerals of the deceased RAF
personnel took place the following week at the military cemetery on HK
island, full military with guard of honour and firing party.
The RN Scimitars broke the sound barrier over Kowloon and shattered the
windows in a tower block on Waterloo Road which didn't go down too well
and a couple of Venoms did a beat up of the Ark Royal's deck while it
was in harbour which didn't go down too well either. The Ark was going
to sea to recover her aircraft and do some weapons training before coming
back into harbour, so the Squadron CO organised for the squadron personnel
to go on board for the day to see how the other half lived (and worked).
All in all a brilliant day out, the flying was impressive and my lasting
impression was that the flight deck was the most unforgiving place to
be, with no room for error.
To be continued
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