Backcountry Pilot • Look 'Ma, no tail! (On my B-52)

Look 'Ma, no tail! (On my B-52)

Near misses, close calls, and lessons learned the hard way. Share with others so that they might avoid the same mistakes.
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Look 'Ma, no tail! (On my B-52)

BRD emailed me this...it's a cool story:
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January 10, 1964, started out as a typical day for the flight test group at Boeing's Wichita plant. Pilot Chuck Fisher took off in a B-52H with a three-man Boeing crew, flying a low-level profile to obtain structural data.?


Over Colorado, cruising 500 feet above the mountainous terrain, the B-52 encountered some turbulence. Fisher climbed to 14,300 feet looking for smoother air. At this point the typical day ended.The bomber flew into clear-air turbulence. It felt as if the plane had been placed in a giant high-speed elevator, shoved up and down, and hit by a heavy blow on its right side.

Fisher told the crew to prepare to abandon the plane. He slowed the aircraft and dropped to about 5,000 feet to make it easier to bail out.
But then Fisher regained some control. He climbed slowly to 16,000 feet to put some safety room between the plane and the ground. He informed Wichita about what was happening. Although control was difficult, Fisher said he believed he could get the plane back in one piece.

Response to the situation at Wichita, and elsewhere, was immediate. An emergency control center was set up in the office of Wichita's director of flight test. Key Boeing engineers and other specialists were summoned to provide their expertise. Federal Aviation Administration air traffic control centers at Denver and Kansas City cleared the air around the troubled plane. A Strategic Air Command B-52 in the area maintained radio contact with the crew of the Wichita B-52.

As Fisher got closer to Wichita, a Boeing chase plane flew up to meet him and to visually report the damage. When Dale Felix, flying an F-100 fighter, came alongside Fisher's B-52, he couldn't believe what he saw: The B-52's vertical tail was gone.

Felix broke the news to Fisher and those gathered in the control center. There was no panic. Everyone on the plane and in the control center knew they could be called upon at any time for just such a situation.? In the emergency control center, the engineers began making calculations and suggesting the best way to get the plane down safely.? The Air Force was also lending assistance. A B-52, just taking off for a routine flight, was used to test the various flight configurations suggested by the specialists before Fisher had to try them.

As high gusty winds rolled into Wichita, the decision was made to divert the B-52 to Blytheville Air Force Base in Northeastern Arkansas.
Boeing specialists from the emergency control center took off in a KC-135 and accompanied Fisher to Blytheville, serving as an airborne control center.

Six hours after the incident first occurred, Fisher and his crew brought in the damaged B-52 for a safe landing.
"I'm very proud of this crew and this airplane," Fisher said. "Also we had a lot people helping us, and we're very thankful for that."
The B-52, Fisher said, "Is the finest airplane I ever flew."

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Zzz offline
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Half a century spent proving “it is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.”

Very Interesting Zane, Fate would have that another B-52 would encounter a similar situation in western Md. I think it was 1967. This plane was carrying 2 nuclear bombs when it lost it's tail over savage river state forest. Two crewman would bailout over the woods and freeze to death in the snow.
The pilot would continue on with the remaining crew trying to fly the plane to safety. Eventually the inevitable happened and it crashed in to a swamp. The navigator would die in the plane, and a memorial erected there in his honor. The bombs were removed by the army but do to it's remote crash location they decided to dig a hole and burry the bulk of the jet in it. Not to long ago my very good friend (owner of the said swamp) was digging a drainage ditch when low and behold he hooked something under ground with his backhoe. After throttling up the tractor he yanked up a pump of some sort and some seriously mangled aluminum. So technically since it was abandoned by the government my friend has his very own Boeing B-52 Superfortress! (or whats left of it)

Anybody interested in a restoration project. :twisted:
I'll try to find some photos of the head stones, and the crash site.
Dusty offline
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Let's see if I remember how to land this thing.

Funny seeing these articles all over the internet. My grandfather, Jim Pittman, was the navigator with this crew and have been told the story many times. As an aside, he passed earlier this week in North Carolina, and this story is definitely one of those defining moments in his life.

TC
Nautor131 offline
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Look' Ma, no tail(on my B-52)

If you ever get to the seaplane fly-in at Moosehead lake check this crash site.It is about a 30 minute ride from Greenville on good logging roads.

http://www.moosehead.net/history/B-52.html

Bill
willyb offline
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Love this line.

engineers began making calculations and suggesting the best way to get the plane down safely


Engineers think they know everything :D
whee offline
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