A_F_2015_03_04_

(John Hannent) #1
With Avalon 2015 upon us, Dave Wheatland reflects
on the safety habits (or not) of air show display pilots
based on many years of experience.

nce again the sun
shines and the air
show season begins in
earnest. The northern
hemisphere show
season has ground to
a halt as snow and cold
weather throughout most of the
USA and Europe takes over.
Every second year Avalon looms
large into the Australian air show
scene but numerous other events
around Australia also bring historic,
vintage, homebuilt and warbirds to
celebrations of our collective aviation
passion. Of course there are a certain
number of the general public who
attend such events for the moments
of drama and excitement that go
hand in glove with the perception
of danger associated with these
spectacular displays of aeronautical
skill. It is difficult to know if people
like this are actually disappointed
when there is no emergency or
incident for them to personally
witness, but along the way there
will be some who will get their
anticipation blood lust rewarded
if they attend enough air displays,
shows or pageants.
I was two years old when I
attended my first air pageant at
Wentworth in NSW. I have little
actual recall, but the Agfacolor slides
that my dad took of the Pobjoy
Niagra powered Comper Swift, the
venerable Westland Widgeon, the
state-of-the-art Cessna 172 and,
of course, the Mustang flown by

Jack Macdonald. These slides show
aircraft taxiing, and milling crowds
wandering through the dust and
heat at the very heart of the display
event. Parents carrying hampers
of sandwiches and thermos of hot
tea, children running around and
the massive red and white tipped
propeller arc of the mighty Mustang
carving a path through the mayhem
with a leather helmeted head out
one side of the cockpit. In some
pics you can see fedora-hatted gents
with nondescript cloth armbands
attempting to marshal the crowds
away from the front of the pride and
joy or the air show organisers.
At the end of the day everyone
goes home sunburned; the attending
pilots fight for precedence in the
departure queue, pandemonium
briefly reigns and the same thing
happens somewhere else the
following weekend.
The first show I do clearly
remember was East Sale open
day 1960. The Red Sales in their
Vampires, the USAF U2 arriving
overhead and landing; the space-
suited pilot climbing out and
boarding a jeep, prior to the beautiful
silver aircraft being towed away.
Accompanying the U2 were RB-
75s and Convair C-131 transports.
The USAF aircraft are indelibly
stamped, but other than the
Vampires and Daks, I can’t recall any
other RAAF aircraft.
Also about this time I remember
accompanying my parents on a visit to

Melbourne where we were treated to
the spectacle of a “vic” of snow-white
RAF V Bombers sweeping across the
city followed by a long nosed Meteor,
I think. Must have been some sort
of event, but it was just fortuitous
for me a kid from regional Victoria.
My great uncle’s house backed onto
Essendon airport, and I would hang
off the paling fence all day, and into
the evening watching the Viscounts,
Electras and DC3s servicing our
state’s capital.
My dad flew, and we got the Crash
Comic delivered to the door courtesy
of the DCA, forerunner of the DOA,
DOT, DOTATG, CAA and of
course with the word “safety” added
( just the word mind you), CASA.
I read those magazines from cover
to cover and even wrote accident
reports when one of my control line

models got “re-kitted ”. The Don
Bush Mustang accident at Bendigo
was a report that stuck with me for
years, and I was devastated that one
of these fabulously rare aircraft had
been destroyed.
This brings me to the whole
point of this meandering missive:
air shows can be great fun, they
can be awesomely entertaining,
but there is always the chance that
someone can get dead.
While no one participates in an
air show or flying display with any
intention of getting hurt or worse, I
have seen some who played the cards
of luck against themselves and went
home in an ambulance or worse. I
was just 17 when I witnessed my first
real-life aircraft accident and stood
transfixed as an Auster with a friend
flying hit a tall tree with one wing,

The Air Show


Safety Paradigm


AUSTRALIAN FLYING March – April 2015

DAVE WHEATLAND


wheatie


The kernels of Dave “Wheatie” Wheatland started out flying crop sprayers
around South Gippsland in Victoria and was instrumental in
the development of the GippsAero GA200 Fatman and the GA8
Airvan. He has ferried and demonstrated the GA8 all around
the world, clocking up 3000 hours on the type. Dave is currently
heading up the test schedule for the GippsAero GA10.

80


BILL WARDLE
Free download pdf