I guess the 'Crimes is gonna have to wait another year for that Pulitzer...Our own newspaper, the Navy record of truth calls it a "chopper" - face palm.

I guess the 'Crimes is gonna have to wait another year for that Pulitzer...Our own newspaper, the Navy record of truth calls it a "chopper" - face palm.
I thought we learned that lesson again when the Helo crew decided to "attempt a hover" over Lake Tahoe a few years back. ?Unrelated, but I have learned that there are some interesting operational and logistical concerns with flying SAR birds long distances into the mountains/high elevation.
Come on...that was just a fresh water wash down.I thought we learned that lesson again when the Helo crew decided to "attempt a hover" over Lake Tahoe a few years back. ?
I wonder when they went from the pin-through clasp to the frogs with multiple prongs. I have my grandfather's dolphins and war patrol pin from WWII, as well as the insignia from his garrison cover. All one-pin designs like the above wings.x2 for the Balfour 10k, though on my grandfather’s flight surgeon wings he gifted to me. Would have been issued approximately 1960
I wonder when they went from the pin-through clasp to the frogs with multiple prongs. I have my grandfather's dolphins and war patrol pin from WWII, as well as the insignia from his garrison cover. All one-pin designs like the above wings.
I bet the transition happened about the same time after WWII that Marines stopped wearing normal people's haircuts and folks stopped posing for uniform photos with their covers cocked askew. As in, at some point we adopted the poke-through pins with frogs when everyone wearing black shoes adopted their present level of anal-retentiveness about uniform regs.
Then I remembered those guys were too busy flying and and trying to kill them before they killed you to give a fuck about dumb shit like that.
Interesting question. My dad’s tiny WWII place-on-piss-cutter wings are pin through but all the rest are prongs...including at least one set he had converted (or converted himself). The funniest set are 1950’s GEMCO wings marked “USMC SER.” He probably just needed some and never looked at the back. Now, all that said, my uncle’s lead AAC wings from WWII are prongs with old heavy-duty clasps that never come off.I wonder when they went from the pin-through clasp to the frogs with multiple prongs. I have my grandfather's dolphins and war patrol pin from WWII, as well as the insignia from his garrison cover. All one-pin designs like the above wings.
I bet the transition happened about the same time after WWII that Marines stopped wearing normal people's haircuts and folks stopped posing for uniform photos with their covers cocked askew. As in, at some point we adopted the poke-through pins with frogs when everyone wearing black shoes adopted their present level of anal-retentiveness about uniform regs.
I’m imagining how hard it would be to get them straight, and doubly so putting them on and off wash khakis all the time like you see in WWII photos. Then I remembered those guys were too busy flying and and trying to kill them before they killed you to give a fuck about dumb shit like that.