Description
Apollo 10 Helicopter Recovery - GPN-2000-001143.jpg
|
English:
A U.S. Navy
Sea King
helicopter arrives to recover the
Apollo 10
astronauts, seen entering a life raft, as the Command Module "Charlie Brown" floats in the South Pacific. U.S. Navy underwater demolition team swimmers assist in the recovery operations. The splashdown occurred at 11:53h, 26 May 1969, about 660 km (400 mi) east of American Samoa. Note that in this photo the divers have attached a flotation collar to the spacecraft.
The recovery helicopter was the Sikorsky SH-3D
Sea King
helicopter no. "66" (BuNo 152711) of Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron 4 (HS-4) "Black Knights". From late 1968 through the spring of 1970, the "Black Knights" of HS-4 participated in and pioneered techniques for the Apollo capsule recoveries. HS-4 was on scene for Apollo missions 8, 10, 11, 12, and 13. The helicopter's flight number was changed from "66" to "740", as after the
Apollo 11
recovery the U.S. Navy had switched to a three number squadron designator - but the helicopter was repainted with the number "66" for each recovery thereafter for public relations reasons. The
Sea King
BuNo. 152711 could not be preserved, as it crashed on 4 June 1975 on a training flight out Imperial Beach (California, USA). Although the crew was rescued the pilot died later of his injuries. The wreck sank to a depth of ca. 700 m.
|