Stephan Wilkinson wrote:
I do want to concentrate on events in which aircraft were involved in the rescue rather than simply the cause for the rescue, and all of the ideas presented so far have been excellent. Thanks to all for your expertise and suggestions. Certainly I will try to avoid the appearance that aviation history "begins with World War II," and I also want to find a good selection of civilian rescues--things like those many incredible rescues involving USCG swimmers and extreme high-altitude save by Nepali helos in the Himalayas.
Just for historical context....the current USCG Rescue Swimmer program started in the mid-1980's. There was an experimental program (SARWET) in the early/mid 70's started by two young enlisted guys who came up with the idea but didn't get much support from HQ to fully develop. This is where the later CG rescue swimmer idea came from. Prior to this, if anyone was incapacitated in the water and needed rescuing, the copilot or one of the guys in the back of the helo were the ones who were going to get wet.
http://www.uscg.mil/history/weboralhist ... istory.aspAlso.....the Air Force's PJ's do some good rescues out in the middle of the oceans. In my experience, we've dumped them out of our C-130's halfway to Bermuda and they were then on their own until they could get located and recovered.
For high altitude rescues, there is an Air National Guard unit out of the Portland area that does the high altitude rescues on Mt Hood. There may even be a Youtube showing one of their H-60's taking a tumble down the snowy mountainside when something didn't go right.
Here ya go.....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BO9o02QIJFg