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until the end of his military flying career in
late 1979. He performed at 112 airshows,
including UK appearances at Finningley,
Biggin Hill, Leuchars, Mildenhall, Coventry,
Waddington and Greenham Common
International Air Tattoo in 1977 and 1978.
Hans explained: “It was a good aircraft
to display but performing well meant taking
it to the very edge of the envelope.” Each

year he had a different aircraft. “First, I
wanted one that was not approaching
major maintenance, so I could keep it all
season. Second, in the handbook it says
‘any inverted or negative flight may result
in flameout’. In reality, some F-104s would
fly for up to one minute inverted and others
flameout immediately, so I always selected
one that we knew could fly inverted for at
least 30 seconds.”

He described the display as a series
of high-speed passes, barrel rolls,
loops, inverted flight and a slow, full flap,
undercarriage down, speed brakes out
at 172kts and a 360° circle whilst in full
burner. “Spectators often told me the
latter was the most spectacular part,”
he commented. “At Volkel I could even
do this within the airfield boundaries
and incorporate a roll,
which was quite an
achievement for an
F-104. The handbook
said it took 10,000ft to
perform a loop, but I did
them within about 6,000ft.
“Mostly the aircraft
took that sort of
treatment, but I did have
one occasion when an
aileron bent a little and
would not slip back
into the wing properly
because the usual very
narrow gap was now too
small. We had to remove
a minor part from the
wing to allow the aileron to fit properly until
we got home to repair it.”
Hans recalled an unfortunate incident
at the Greenham Common International
Air Tattoo in June 1977: “On the Thursday
before the show, as I arrived the tower
asked me to make a low pass, which I did.
The US base commander was extremely
unhappy about the flyby. But that may have
had more to do with what happened on the

ground as I made the pass. A tractor was
towing an F-15 across the runway at the
same time. I had seen it, so there was no
danger of collision, but as the driver saw
me getting closer he jumped from the cab
and dived for cover!
“When I landed I was banned from the
display because I had flown too low. I had
mistakenly thought, on the arrival day the
special display rules did not apply, after all
the tower had asked me to do it.”

FLAMEOUT
He remembers another notable occasion:
“On September 2, 1977, I was to fly a display
for a 315 Sqn anniversary at Twenthe. When
starting up at Volkel my own aircraft went
unserviceable. My spare was not available
either, so we took the next aircraft that
returned from a routine flight. We stripped
off the tanks and pylons, as I flew the aircraft
completely clean for the routine, but I had
no chance to do anything other than the
standard checks.
“I flew to Twenthe at Mach 0.9 to meet
my slot time and entered my display routine.
The moment I went upside down I had a
flameout. That was something memorable!
During displays whenever I flew inverted,
or applied negative ‘g’, I primed the J-79
engine ignition and had my finger ready
over it, just in case, ready to fire. You just
pulled the trigger and the engine restarted.
It must have looked spectacular from the
ground with about 20ft of flame behind me
and I completed my display. Fortunately,
I was going fast enough to stay in the

http://www.aviation-news.co.uk 39

The Orpheus recce pod fitted to a 306 Sqn F-104G. Ronald de Roij

No.323 Sqn F-104G streaming a brake ’chute moments after landing at Soesterberg in April 1978. Note the AIM-9 training round. Cor Vermolen

36-40_starfighter_dutchDC.mfDC.mf.indd 39 04/07/2018 17:29

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