Carol Ann and I have been in Wichita Falls attending an RV club
rally since Monday. Today was a free day so I tried to go
back in time 45-years by traveling one-hour north to Fort Sill, OK.
In 1969 I spent eight weeks at Fort Sill learning how to be a “fire
direction control specialist,” or MOS (Military Occupation Specialty) 13E20 but
found nothing today to jog any memories of that time. In the spring of 1969 I
was assigned to Delta Battery of the 7th Training Battalion (D-7 it was called). That unit is no longer active and there is no longer a 13E20 MOS. Almost everything has been
remodeled, torn down and rebuilt, or otherwise changed over the past 45 years –
including my memory.
While at Fort Sill chasing my youth we visited the US Army Field Artillery Museum where I had
hoped to find something familiar. The museum’s displays cover the history
of artillery from the very beginning to the current time. Only a small portion is devoted to the Vietnam War, but it did include the 155mm howitzer, towed,
and the Field Artillery Digital Automatic Computer (FADAC). I was familiar with
the artillery piece because I spent thirteen-months in a 155mm howitzer
battalion (the 2nd/11th Field Artillery Battalion) attached to the 101st
Airborne Division, Airmobile, at Camp Eagle, near Phu Bai, in the Republic of
Vietnam (which no longer exists).
The FADAC was the first fire direction computer ever built. The Army called it the M18 Gun Direction computer. It was a very rudimentary portable (at about 200 pounds) computer that calculated firing data for a battery of six guns. Only after mastering the manual computations using slide rules ("slip sticks"), firing tables (similar to log tables), and trigonometric calculations were we taught to use the FADAC. As you may imagine, computers in the 60’s were
extremely slow, the FADAC being no exception. It was so slow that two manual
fire missions could be calculated in the time it took the FADAC to calculate
one. The FADAC was also an extremely sensitive piece of equipment and
experienced a lot of down time. Maintenance was frequent and the need for repair
common. Its poor reliability coupled with its slow speed meant it was used very
little in Vietnam – especially when troops in the field were screaming for
artillery support “NOW.”
In the April 1969 issue of Fort Sill's "The Field Artilleryman,"an article by MAJ Martell D. Fritz stated:
"The M18 Gun Direction Computer (FADAC) has become the primary means of computing firing data for artillery units in Southeast Asia. The FADAC is a general purpose computer and will perform any computational task for which a program has been written and inserted into memory."(I added the emphasis as a bit of sarcasm because the Major either didn't know what he was talking about or was simply repeating what the brass wanted to hear.)
Here are a few photos I took in the museum. The quality is poor but I will blame that on the museum's poor lighting.
"Slip Sticks" |
FADAC |
FADAC (side view) |
The "Matrix" |
Number keyboard (looks "homemade") |
The museum’s FADAC is the only one remaining in existence.
At some point in time, after I had left the Army, all of the FADACs were
rounded up by the U.S. Department of Energy and disposed of as HAZARDOUS WASTE because of the use of radium (a radioactive element) on the dials. So,
in addition to Agent Orange and god knows what else, I have also been exposed
to ionizing radiation. Hopefully, in such small amounts as to cause no harm.
After leaving the museum we drove to the Food Court (open to
civilians) at the main PX. There were about half a dozen fast food outlets and
several shops at the entrance to the PX. It was similar to a shopping mall with
the PX being one of the mall’s anchor stores. There was nothing like this
in 1969. But I do remember walking to a much smaller PX with my buddies, sitting at a picnic table in the
beer garden, and drinking from quart bottles of Coors Beer (3.2% military) under the cottonwoods in the afternoon after classes.
In some respects I miss that. After all, it was my youth, and it completely
changed my life.
4 comments :
Robert, I too was at Ft. Sill. I was a 15E20, Pershing missile crewman. You collected a few ionizing rays from Radium, huh, while I was loading a Plutonium war head. Luckily mine was painted black indicating that it was a dummy. The O.D. ones didn't appear until Germany. I have tons of great Ft. Sill stories. My 3 months there were memorable and fun.
Stoney
Contact me at sshukat@gmail.com or 305-801-6880
Tomorrow we will visit Howard Hughes Spruce Goose.
Did you visit the Arbuckle mountains while in Wichita Falls?
Glad you can remember stories about Fort Sill.I Googled the Arbuckle mountains to see whether you were pulling my leg or not. Surprised me to find that you weren't!
18 years old 1 semester of college so I was college boy and chosen for fdc 101st airborne 155mm howitzers mos 12a10 combat engineer transferred fron 82nd airborne (no jump school, no volunteer) but only 5 months in country not part of withdrawl (needed I think 7 months to go home).
Fadac (freddie) versus data check using slide rules, radio contact with grunts translating into firing data. 18 years old, stupid, wtf. Sp4
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