C-130 Hercules first flew in 1954, an easily maintained aircraft which
entered service with the USAF Tactical Air Command. Ten years later the
Charlie 130 was providing the essential logistical support in Vietnam
where a new landing technique, the Khe Sanh approach, added to the
Hercules folklore. Paradrops, airlift, and evacuation operations were
completed around the clock, often at low level, usually under fire, and
nearly always in bad weather. AC-130 gunships blasted the Ho Chi Minh
Trail at night, Lamplighters and Blind Bats dropped flares, and others
scattered defoliant, 'pancake bombs' and 15,000 Big Blue block-busters.
But more than anything else it was in the role of Trash and Ass hauler
that the C-130 earned unstinting admiration from ground troops and
aircrews alike. The Herky Bird or Fat Albert, as the C-130 is fondly
known, went on to serve with similar panache in the Gulf War and in
humanitarian relief operations around the world. Today, the modern
C-130J version continues to provide the effective support for which the
Hercules name is renowned.