AdlerDriver said:
You're the second person to alluded to him running out of gas. Were you implying there might be some truth to him doing so on the 3 Mig kill mission? Just curious. I had always enjoyed the end of the story....dodging 18 SAMs (...well, 17) and then barrel rolling out to sea with no hydraulics after killing 3 Migs. I'd never considered it to be anything other than a great display of flying. Now you (and Duke, of course) have got me wondering.
What a shame.
I have about 1,500 hours it the F-4. I know what it burns per minute in a dogfight. I know how much fuel it carries. I've heard his de-brief on the mission (load-out, fuel load, altitudes, engagement duration, distance from the ship, etc). I've got an autographed copy of his book.
I'm good enough at math to know what happened.
The unwritten rule was that we never try to dilute the impact of an amazing feat by another fighter pilot. He bagged three in one flight. No question. He had great hands and mastery of a difficult aircraft to fight with.
But the calculator doesn't lie.
A narrative that ends, "...
and then we ran out of gas." is not the stuff of sky gods. The fact that one of his wingman (he only had 2 that day, instead of 3) trapped with 3.1 - without a 4-minute engagement with Col Toon - tends to support the theory.
Only "Duke" and "Irish" know for certain.
Whenever any of his peers would bust his chops at 'Hook or at the Miramar O'Club, Duke would hold up his hand with all 5 fingers spread out.
"Five"
So let me make it clear:
I wasn't there and have no idea whether he ran out go-juice, ran out of go-juice and then got popped by a SAM...or if he just got popped by a SAM.
Still, there are enough of us with Phantom savvy who know a weak narrative when we hear one. Sam Flynn (another Phantom driver, and MiG killer) told a gathering of us,
"If you run outta gas, make sure you've got 3 kills...or they'll hang yer a$$"