Days Of wings and Engines - part 3 | By: Peter Hunter | | Category: Short Story - Other Bookmark and Share

Days Of wings and Engines - part 3


Days of Wings and Engines - part three

Peter Hunter

   Half-way through the barrel roll and things were going well - an upside-down Buckinghamshire portrayed as a patchwork of yellow, green and brown dissected by black and grey veins smudged only by the occasional car.

   Then I was suddenly flat on my back - suspended by safety harness and the half-G or so maintained by the centrifugal force at the top of the barrel roll.  The sudden, unscheduled and unexpected manoeuvre, my left hand still attached to the control stick - resulted in puling the aircraft into a flick roll which developed into a fully-fledged spin.  Now- instead of seeing the ground through the Perspex roof of the canopy - the windscreen in front of me was filled with the rapidly spinning vision of the home county earth...

   … so much like a rotating Google map - the countryside rapidly getting closer… The rear of my car-type folding seat had collapsed, broken… I was unable to sit upright unless I supported myself with my right arm braced against the right-hand, the passenger seat - not the best way of practising spin recovery in an airplane I had never spun before…

   Back now in straight and level flight, I checked all my readings.  The accelerometer read high, but not over the Falco’s G-limit, so all was good…  No -problems - at least until I returned to the airfield where the handicap of one using only my left hand - the necessity of using my right on to support my self upright…

   …. might prove embarrassing.

   Realising I could let go for a few moments using my back muscles to remain upright was a help, but the main problem was unlike more modern machines, the Falco’s brakes were operated by a single bar situated between the rudder pedals, rather than the conventional two pedal brake arrangement. 

   Also, it required quite a lot of pressure to be effective…

   The collapsed seat back - would not permit me to use much pressure.

   It seemed to me time to call on some of the benefits I paid for with my monthly landing fees and parking charges.

   ‘Booker Tower - this is Golf Foxtrot Alfa Lima Charlie...’ I transmitted.

   ‘Lima Charlie - go ahead.’ the control tower reply.

‘Lima Charlie - small problem... My set back’s collapsed and I can't fully reach the controls…  so could you have the crash wagon stand by in case I slew off the runway?’

   Unknown to me at the time, my wife, Celia, was flying circuits in a Cessna 150 with her instructor, an ex-RAF Group Captain.  Later… according to the instructor, she had stayed calm and unconcerned.

   I was proud of her…

   In my twenty plus years owning Golf Foxtrot Lima Charlie, she never once tried to kill me, the airplane not my wife - although there were times… two or three engine blow-ups, partial engine failures as valves destroyed themselves against pistons during race practice - two instances where the nose undercarriage leg failed - little things as she tested me and kept me on my mettle - from becoming complacent.

   In human terms she was the perfect lover - always demanding, attention seeking - requiring the utmost care and sensitivity.

   For me the perfect airplane…

   … but never a serious threat…

 

End

©  Peter Hunter 2012

Extract from Peter Hunter's auto portrayal Too Many Miles From A Land Of Rivers

Click Here for more stories by Peter Hunter

Comments