C-123B and C-123K Provider's Avionics (1 Viewer)

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yahya

Recruit
4
1
Apr 6, 2024
Could someone share the pages from the original flight manuals that list and elaborate the C-123B and K avionics suite please?
 
Unfortunately I do not have a C-123 flight manual in my collection. But I worked with someone who was a crew chief on NC-123B aircraft that were used for special operations missions. Those aircraft had a weather radar in a radome installed above the cockpit, a doppler radar installed in the tail, and extensive radar jamming equipment. They also had Collins 618T HF radios for communications relating to the special operations. Other equipment would have included an ARC-27 or ARC-34 UHF communications transceiver (pretty much standard on USAF aircraft of that era) and in all probability an ARN-6 ADF receiver.

That's all I have.
 
Thank you for the reply. While I do not have any source material on the NC-123B avionics suite, I presume that this could have been related to the ROCAF C-123B of that vintage, which were also used for special ops in SEA. The main difference was the primary nav system, since the ROCAF Providers were equipped with Omega instead of Doppler.

The photos of the C-123B/Ks available online suggest that the Providers were indeed equipped with the ARN-6 ADF, but perhaps also with VOR or TACAN DME. That's why I still count on someone's flight manuals library.
 
Oh, I would expect that they would have VOR and TACAN, but I do not know which equipment. I would suspect they would have VHF Comm as well as UHF but I don't know which gear. I did a short write-up on what my friend told me and if I can find that again I will post it here.

The 618T was used for comm with the HQ and not the ground units they were supporting. It seems that all comm with the ground units was via the HQ. I would think they would have gear that could talk with backpack gear like the PRC-25, such as an ARC-114, but my friend did not indicate that.
 
Some hints from the scanned manual pages available online.

On the captain's station, the ID-250 RMI was slaved to the ARN-6 on the C-123B/K. The pointer #1 showed the ADF indication. The pointer #2 was slaved to the ID-251 VOR indicator or the ID-307 TACAN bearing indicator depending on the avionics suite.

On the co-pilot's station, the ID-250 RMI was slaved to the ARN-6 ADF #1 and #2. So, two such sets were used on some a/c.

However, there were also the C-123 examples that used a single ARN-6 ADF.

It also seems that the ARA-25 UHF DF was also used on certain military Providers. It was slaved to the ID-250 RMI.

I presume that the ARC-114 solid state COM was too modern to see use on the C-123s in Nam. I would rather think that old tube radios from the 1950s were installed on the cargo Providers.
 

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