P-38 Lightning missions Second lieutenant Olds completed fighter pilot training with the
329th Fighter Group, an
operational training unit based at
Grand Central Air Terminal in
Glendale, California. His initial twin-engine training at
Williams Field, Arizona, was in the
Curtiss AT-9, followed by transition fighter training to the
Lockheed P-38 Lightning in its P-322 variant. After gunnery training at
Matagorda, Texas in the first half of August 1943, he was assigned to P-38 phase training at
Muroc Army Air Field, California. Olds was promoted to
first lieutenant on December 1, 1943. In early 1944 he became part of the cadre assigned to build up the newly activated
434th Fighter Squadron and its parent
479th Fighter Group, based at
Lomita, California. Olds logged 650 hours of flying time during training, including 250 hours in the P-38 Lightning, as the 479th built its proficiency as a combat group. It departed the Los Angeles area on April 15 for
Camp Kilmer,
New Jersey, and shipped aboard the
USS Argentina for Europe on May 3. The 479th arrived in Scotland on May 14, 1944, and entrained for
RAF Wattisham, in eastern
England, where it arrived the next day. The 479th began combat on May 26, flying bomber escort missions and attacking transportation targets in occupied France in advance of the
invasion of Normandy. Olds flew a new P-38J Lightning that he nicknamed
Scat II. Olds' crew chief, T/Sgt. Glen A. Wold, said that he showed an immediate interest in aircraft maintenance and learned emergency servicing under Wold. He also insisted his aircraft be waxed to reduce air resistance and helped his maintenance crew carry out their tasks. On July 24 Olds was promoted to
captain and became a flight and later squadron leader. Following a low-level bridge-bombing mission to
Montmirail, France, on August 14, Olds shot down his first German aircraft, a pair of
Focke-Wulf Fw 190s. On an escort mission to
Wismar on August 23, his flight was on the far left of the group's line abreast formation and encountered 40–50
Messerschmitt Bf 109s near
Wittenberge, flying north at the same altitude in a loose formation of three large vees. Olds turned his flight left and began a ten-minute pursuit in which they climbed to altitude above and behind the Germans. Over
Bützow, undetected by the Germans, Olds and his wingman jettisoned their fuel drop tanks and attacked, although the second element of the flight had been unable to keep up during the climb. Just as Olds began firing, both engines of his P-38 quit from fuel exhaustion; in the excitement of the attack he had neglected to switch to his internal fuel tanks. He continued attacking in "dead-stick mode", hitting his target in the fuselage and shooting off part of its engine cowling. After fatally damaging the Bf 109 he dived away and restarted his engines. Despite battle damage to his own plane, including loss of a side window of its canopy, Olds shot down two during the dogfight and another on the way home to become the first ace of the 479th FG. Although in
Dogfights S1EP2, Robin Olds recounts this memory of the P-38 needing help with some variance. He says "I went on into the fight, got another one, BE (His wing man) got two others with one pass. Then I looked down and there was a
North American P-51 Mustang, and where he came from; I have no idea." The Narrator then tells the viewers that the P-51 Mustang is being chased by two
Bf 109s. Olds dove to help and in his excitement dove too fast. This led him to be subject to
compressibility. Upon reaching the denser air at lower altitudes he regained control of his P-38 and pulled up. This led to his canopy window blowing out due to excess
G forces. He said "It sounds like an exaggeration but I managed to pull out, right above this wheat field near the town of
Rostock." That made him one of very few that have recovered from a compressibility event. "After that I had enough, I was ready to go home" But a string of
tracer fire across his nose brought him right back into the fight, as a Bf 109 dove from behind on him. Weighing his options, he decided to risk it all and flat planed. While pulling hard on the yoke and turning hard left at 90°. That made him shutter into a high speed
stall, the air combat equivalent of locking the brakes. The Bf 109 passed beneath him and as he rolled the nose down he fired, taking the Bf 109 out before heading home. He made eight claims while flying the P-38 (five of which are sustained by the Air Force Historical Research Agency) and was originally credited as the top-scoring P-38 pilot of the
European Theater of Operations.
P-51 Mustang pilot The 479th FG converted to the
P-51 Mustang in mid-September. On his second transition flight, at the point of touchdown during landing, Olds learned a lesson in "false confidence" when the powerful torque of the single-engined fighter forced him to
ground loop after the Mustang veered off the runway. Olds shot down an Fw 190 in his new
Scat VI on October 6 during a savage battle near Berlin in which he was nearly shot down by his own wingman. He completed his first combat tour on November 9, 1944, accruing 270 hours of combat time and six kills. ). It survived World War II and is preserved in its wartime color scheme. After returning to the United States for a two-month leave, Olds began a full second tour at Wattisham on January 15, 1945. He was assigned duties as operations officer of the 434th Fighter squadron. Promoted to
major on February 9, 1945, Olds claimed his seventh victory southeast of
Magdeburg, Germany the same day, downing another Bf 109. On February 14, he claimed three victories, two Bf 109s and an Fw 190, but one of the former was credited only as a "probable". His final World War II aerial kill occurred on April 7, 1945, when Olds in
Scat VI led the 479th Fighter Group on a mission escorting
B-24s bombing an ammunition dump in
Lüneburg, Germany. The engagement marked the only combat appearance of
Sonderkommando Elbe, a German Air Force
squadron formed to ram Allied bombers. South of
Bremen, Olds noticed
contrails popping up above a bank of
cirrus clouds, of aircraft flying above and to the left of the bombers. For five minutes these
bogeys paralleled the bomber stream while the 479th held station. Turning to investigate, Olds saw pairs of
Me 262s turn towards and dive on the Liberators. After damaging one of the jets in a chase meant to lure the fighter escort away from the bombers, the Mustangs returned to the bomber stream. Olds observed a Bf 109 of
Sonderkommando Elbe attack the bombers and shoot down a B-24. Olds pursued the Bf 109 through the formation, and shot it down. Olds achieved the bulk of his strafing credits the following week in attacks on
Lübeck Blankensee and
Tarnewitz airdromes on April 13, and
Reichersberg airfield in
Austria on April 16, when he destroyed six German planes on the ground. He later reflected on the hazards of such missions: I was hit by
flak as I was pulling out of a dive-strafing pass on an airfield called Tarnewitz, up on the
Baltic. Five P-51s made a pass on the airdrome that April day. I was the only one to return home...When I tested the
stall characteristics of my wounded bird over our home airfield, I found it quit flying at a little over
indicated and rolled violently into the dead wing (
note: the right flap had been blown away and two large holes knocked in the same wing). What to do? Bailout seemed the logical response, but here's where sentiment got in the way of reason. That airplane (
note: "Scat VI") had taken me through a lot and I was damned if I was going to give up on her...why the bird and I survived the careening, bouncing and juttering ride down the length of the field, I guess I'll never know. Olds had not only risen in rank to
field grade, but was given command of his squadron on March 25, less than two years out of West Point and at only 22 years of age. By the end of his combat service he was officially credited with 12 German planes shot down and 11.5 others destroyed on the ground. Olds became an ace on both of his combat tours and was twice awarded the
Silver Star, for the mission of August 25 and for the achievements of himself and his squadron during his combined tours. As recognized by the American Fighter Aces Association, Olds was the only pilot to "make ace" in both the P-38 (5 victories) and the P-51 (8 victories). ==Postwar highlights and assignments==