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The Further Adventures of........................ Mike Stanley 681312 |
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I had decided that I wouldn't sign on again [ it was them rifles that did it]. About this time( 1964/5) it was not automatically granted to extend one's service. Blokes( especially armourer SNCO's) were often told to re-apply , and in fact it was suggested to apply 3 years before your time was up .My previous service at RAF St Athan hadn't encouraged me to sign on, and, if I put my hand on my heart , I felt that I would not be accepted anyway . I preferred to jump before getting the push! I had decided that after I left the RAF I would join GPO Telephones,
not as a lowly technician on a weekly wage of £11, I was a £1000
a year man and couldn't accept a lowering of my status! . All I had to
do was gain the Telecommunication Technicions Certificate [ City and Guilds
] which would allow me to enter as a Technical Officer , higher pay and
status than a technician . I knew that the local technical college in
Cardiff trained the GPO's budding technical officers. My 2 year accompanied
tour to Aden would give me time enough to complete a correspondance course
in the subject and with my last year back at RAF St Athan ,and day release
at the college, I would be well placed to pass the certificate just before
I left Her Gracious Majesty's employment. I was posted to 37 (MR) Sqdn at RAF Khormaksar, who flew Shackleton Mk 2's.{ aka 20,000 rivets flying in close formation}.This was what I had joined for ; working on aircraft , with a real job to do. Although the squadron's primary task was Search and Rescue the situation in Aden, and up in the Radfan mountains, put us in a war zone and the Shacks' carried, at different times depending on the role they were assigned 2x 20m/m Hispano cannons with 600 rounds ,12x 1000lb bombs , sonar bouys , 48x 20lb fragmentation bombs , 4.5 " flares ; in fact it was plumber's heaven! I flew with the aircraft when they did firing practice and bombing practice, I went on detachments to Sharjar and Dubai ; Salalah , Iran,and Kenya, and although I didn't go with the squadron to Madagascar I do have the visa in my passport. The only fly in the ointment was the internal security situation in Aden . My wife and daughter, living off camp in Ma'alla where I eventually was allocated a hiring , had to stay cooped up in the flat for many days , while I went off on detachments. Eventually the situation got so bad that the families were sent home and I moved on to the camp . In some ways I was glad that they had gone back to UK, my wife was pregnant with our son and Aden wasn't the place to be at that time , bombs and grenades going off and bullets flying .I was due to leave Aden on the 5th September 1967(!) and 37 Squadron was to disband on the 6th September( I hadn't realised how indispensable I was to the squadron) As it turned out I didn't get away until the 6th as the civvy air- trooping aircraft had gone u/s in Nairobi and we had a 24 hour delay. When we learnt that some of the cabin staff had helped in an engine change ( another Britania), the engine fitters on board spent the whole flight listening and looking at the engine in question. So September 1967 and back ,in quarters , at RAF St Athan. With one thing
and another I hadn't progressed too far with my correspondence course,
but no matter I thought, I will get day release at the technical college
and catch up with what I had missed .
It was Plessey that had the pleasure of my company and when I left the
RAF in November 1968 I started work at RAF West Drayton , just over the
road from Heathrow , as a trainee computer programer working on a MOD
contract dealing with radar data processing for an air traffic control
system . Some of you may have come across Linesman?
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