"Chuck"
Castle recalls an incident involving Crew 20's radar operator
Porfilos Rios. It occurred along about their 2nd or 3rd
mission - target location now forgotten. Castle's story
follows:
"No
one had ever briefed us or warned us about flying into
a heat thermal caused by fires set by bombers going in
ahead of us. We had to bomb by radar that night, and Rio
had just announced "bombs away." He got up out of his
seat and started to make his way to the gunner's stations
so he could see the results of his work. At this point,
we entered a column of intense heat and smoke. We shot
upward from 18,000 feet to 21,000 feet in a seemingly
split second. The momentum picked Rio up and threw him
to the floor, knocking him unconscious! We in the front
believed the aircraft had been hit by flak. I began calling
each crewmember on the intercom. First the tail gunner
answered, "I'm okay, what the hell happened?" Next a call
went to the radar operator - no response. The three gunners
reported that they were in good shape - shaken up but
not injured. We in the nose compartment were equally shaken
but no on had been hurt.
After
leaving the coast of Japan, Lt Post asked one of the gunners
to check on Rio. When he came back on the intercom, he
was laughing like mad - so much so, we had difficulty
in understanding him. He finally regained his composure
enough to explain what happened. It seems that after being
knocked to the floor the, the urine can had broken loose
from it's mooring, showering its contents over the unconscious
Rios. The gunner reported that the drenched radar operator
was okay but understandably madder then hell.
When
we finally landed and taxied to our pad, Rios flew down
the ladder missing the last three steps, and hurled himself
into a stagnant pool of muddy water that had accumulated
nearby. It did little to relieve the terrible odor. He
continued to smell like a fish that had washed up on the
shore and had been lying on the sun for a week or two."
It's
likely that Rio would remember this mission more than
any of the others he had flown.
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