Australian Flying - July 2018

(Wang) #1

53


three of their directors. It seems
they wanted him to deliver the
aircraft to the mine, somewhere
inland. They also thought is
would be a brilliant idea if Jack
was to do a f ly-past while a
photographer filmed the event.
So Jack and the three directors
climbed aboard, took off, did a
180 and dived down on the man
with the cine-camera, which
was mounted on a solid tripod.
Looking through the viewfinder,
the photographer didn’t have the
correct perspective of how fast and
low the aircraft was.
Perhaps it was the heavy load,
or the high temperature, or
simply a desire to push things
to the limit. Whatever the
reason, Jack managed to take the
photographer’s head off with the
wing. A very nasty business.


But it immediately became a
whole lot more nasty. A pointy bit of
the massive camera sliced through
the bottom skin of the wing. Jack
obviously got a hell of a fright and
hauled back on the pole. The G
forces, combined with the weakened
wing structure caused the wing to
fold upwards and the whole lot went
into the ground upside-down. There
were no survivors.
In fact Placo barely survived.
We were sued by the company,
or the insurers, or someone,
because our pilot had caused this
devastation. I don’t remember
the amount, but it was certainly
enough to close us down.
Ultimately we were able to show
that our contract was to deliver the
aircraft to Luanda, and that Jack
was acting on his own behalf when
he agreed to f ly it on to the mine.

Quinton Posthumus
A handsome young pilot, with very
little experience and a curious name.
Anyhow he was dispatched to
Cape Town in a 140 Cherokee to
use his charm to rustle up some
business and sell a few aeroplanes.
The target market was the f lying
clubs and schools. We were
deliberately selling 140 Cherokees
at exactly the same price as 150
Cessnas in order to corner the
training market. This would
soon lead to Piper-trained pilots
wanting to buy Pipers rather than
Cessnas. The strategy worked
extremely well world-wide.
In those days, Youngsfield
was still in operation. It was at
Kennilworth, in the shadow of
Table Mountain. It was a wonderful
old-time genuine airfield: no
runways, just a big squarish grass

field, which meant that you never
had to cope with crosswinds.
Exactly how Quentin hoped
to justify f lying-school sales, by
taking three young ladies for a ride
in a 140 Cherokee is not recorded.
The first we heard was a phone
call to Zingi, saying that the aircraft
had crashed killing all on board.
It turned out to be the old story;
the one that had nearly put an
end to Eric and me. A beat-up,
followed by a stall-turnish thing
that went wrong. And they spun
into the ground.
Again, Placo was left to
prove that Jack was acting in
his own interests and not as a
representative of the company.
Then we had another death.
A young guy named Wagner, I
think, was delivering a Bonanza
to Durban. Weather forced him

australianflying.com.au

July – August 2018 AUSTRALIAN FLYING

A pilot’s logbook is far more that just a record of dates, times, places and ights; it is also a history of a pilot’s


ying career and a chronicle of the lessons learnt that makes them the aviator they are today. Jim Davis takes


a look back through his own logbooks, and records the incidents that have shaped his approach to ying.


LEFT: The Twin Comanche was a common charter weapon in the day,
and the type that Ken Anders lew on his nal mission.
BELOW: Max Kolb’s Cherokee 180 was often used as a subject for his
fashion photography work.

JIM DAVIS
Free download pdf