SpadGuy wrote:
A-1Es operated by the USAF in both the 1st ACS and the 602nd FS(C) under the 34th Tac Group at Bien Hoa were all marked with VNAF markings until March of 1965. These were the most often photographed A-1E/Gs during the early period of the Vietnam War. I am at a slight disadvantage because, although I have seen this photo many times, I do not know when the photo was taken. If the Skyraider has VNAF markings, it would come from this early period.
I have seen MAP spec talk earlier in this thread, and if you are talking about A-1E/Gs that went straight to the VNAF from the USN, then there was outwardly little changed from the USN configuration except for removal of the tail hook and change/modification of comm antennas.
No, this isn't one of those airplanes (1964-March '65). I have several other good photos of this one, almost certainly on the same mission (exact same loadout). I'll have to check but I believe at least two of those photos are identified as 1966. The first time I saw "1966," I assumed it was an error. The second time, I thought twice. The real oddball thing about this airplane is it's carrying the miniature US stars on both fuselage and wings, the same type normally seen on
camouflaged airplanes. I don't think those even existed yet in early 1965.
And then I found a picture of another airplane, another MAP-spec, carrying the same odd markings, also dated 1966. That one is 134997, which was shot down on November 22, 1966, and was Skycraned back to Pleiku, where it apparently went to the boneyard where it was stripped for parts. One photo I have shows it in the junkyard with USAF and the SN in small numbers on the fin, the small, camo-type US stars, and the VNAF-type AT-145 antenna clearly visible. (That pic's on page 91 of the
Warbird Tech #13 book, if you have that.)