HomeMeetingsOfficersOps ProceduresMembershipDaedalian InfoLemayHonor Roll 

    Flying in 1917              Flying Advice

                                                                                Flying was a bit different in 1917 !!!

 Flying Reports: The following safety tips from Daedalian Foundation are excerpts from Royal Flying Corps monthly report of December 1917. The report was signed C. St. John-Culbertson, Royal Flying Corps Colonel and was dated 21 December, 1917.

 INTRODUCTION                   Another good month.

In all, a total of 35 accidents were reported, only six of which were avoidable. These represented a marked improvement over the month of November during which 84 accidents occurred, of which 23 were avoidable. This improvement, no doubt, is the result of experienced pilots with over 100 hours in the air forming the backbone of all the units.

 RESUME OF ACCIDENTS 

Avoidable Accidents

 1. There were six avoidable accidents this last month.

a. The pilot of a Shorthorn, with over 7 hours of experience, seriously damaged the undercarriage on landing. He had failed to land at as fast a speed as possible as recommended in the Aviation Pocket Handbook.

b. A B.E.2 stalled and crashed during an artillery exercise. The pilot had been struck on the head by the semaphore of his observer who was signaling to the gunners.

c. Another pilot in a B.E.2 failed to get airborne, by an error of judgment, he was attempting to fly at mid-day instead of at the recommended best lift periods, which are just after dawn and just before sunset.

d. A Longhorn pilot lost control and crashed in a bog near Chipping- Sedbury. An error of skill on the part of the pilot in not being able to control a machine with a wide speed band of 10 MPH between top speed and stalling speed.

e. While low flying in a Shorthorn the pilot crashed into the top deck of a horse drawn bus near Stonehenge.

f. A B.E.2 pilot was seen to be attempting a banked turn at a constant height before he crashed. A grave error by an experienced pilot.

 Unavoidable Accidents

2. There were 29 unavoidable accidents from which the following are selected:

a. The top wing of a Camel fell off due to fatigue failure of the flying wires. A successful emergency landing was carried out.

b. Sixteen B.E.2's and 9 Shorthorns had complete engine failures. A marked improvement over November's fatigue.

c. Pigeons destroyed a Camel and 2 Longhorns after mid-air strikes. COST OF ACCIDENTS Accidents during the last three months of 1917 cost
317 pounds, 10 shillings sixpence, money down the drain and sufficient to buy new gaiters and spurs for each and every pilot observer in the Service.

 ACCIDENT BRIEFS

No. 1 Brief No. 912

Squadron, 3 December 1917 Aircraft type B.E.2C, No. KY678, Total Solo - - 4.20 Pilot Lt. J. Smyth-Worthington, Solo in type - - 1.10 The pilot of this flying machine attempted to maintain his altitude in a turn at 2,500 feet. This resulted in the airplane entering an unprecedented maneuver, entailing a considerable loss of height. Even with full power applied and the control column fully back, the pilot was unable to regain control. However, upon climbing from the cockpit onto the lower mainplane, the pilot managed to correct the machines altitude, and by skillful manipulation of the flying wires successfully side-slipped into a nearby meadow. Remarks: Although, through inexperience, this pilot allowed his aeroplane to enter an unusual attitude, his resourcefulness in eventually landing without damage has earned him a unit citation. R.F.C. Lundsford-Magnus is investigating the strange behaviour of this aircraft.

 No. 2 Brief No. 847

Squadron 19 December 1917 Aircraft Type Spotter Balloon J17983, total solo 107.00 Pilot Capt. ***, Solo in type 32.10 Capt * * * of the Hussars, a balloon observer, unfortunately allowed the spike of his full-dress helmet to impinge against the envelope of his balloon. There was a violent explosion and the balloon carried out a series of fantastic and uncontrollable maneuvers, while rapidly emptying itself of gas. The pilot was thrown clear and escaped injury as he was lucky enough to land on his head. Remarks This pilot was flying in full- dress uniform because he was the Officer of the Day. In consequence it has been recommended that pilots will not fly during periods of duty as Officer of the Day. Captain* * * has requested an exchange posting to the Patroville Alps, a well known mule unit of the Basques

 No. 3 Brief Summary of No. 3 Brief dated October 1917

Major W. de Kitkag-Watney's Neuport Scout was extensively damaged when it failed to become airborne. The original court of Inquiry found that the primary cause of the accident was carelessness and poor airmanship on the part of a very experienced pilot. The Commandant General, however, not being wholly convinced that Major de Kitkag-Watney could be guilty of so culpable a mistake ordered that the court should be re-convened. After extensive inquiries and lengthy discussions with the Meteorlogical Officer and Astronomer Royal, the Court came to the conclusion that the pilot unfortunately was authorized to fly his aircraft on a day when there was absolutely no lift in the air and could not be held responsible for the accident. The Court wishes to take this opportunity to extend congratulations to Major de Kitkag-Watney on his reprieve and also on his engagement to the Commandant General's daughter, which was announced shortly before the accident.

 FLYING SAFETY TIPS

 Horizontal Turns

To take a turn the pilot should always remember to sit upright, otherwise he will increase the banking of the aeroplane. He should never lean over.

 Crash Precautions

Every pilot should understand the serious consequences of trying to turn with the engine off.

 It is much safer to crash into a house when going forward than to sideslip or stall a machine with engine trouble.

 Passengers should always use safety belts, as the pilot may start stunting without warning. Never release the belt while in the air, or when nosed down to land.

 Engine Noises

Upon the detection of a knock, grind, rattle or squeak, the engine should be at once stopped. Knocking or grinding accompanied by a squeak indicates binding and a lack of lubricant.

 WATCH THAT FIRST STEP

 The First Marine Air Wing had this write up in their safety publication, Wing Tips of an AAR board's comments some 40 years ago: It was conceded by all that the pilot had accomplished a brilliant piece of work in landing his disabled machine without damage under the circumstances. It is not with intent to reflect less credit upon his airmanship, but it must be noted that he is a well experienced aviator with over 40 total hours in the air, embracing a wide variety of machines, and this was his seventh forced landing due to complete failure of the engine.

 It was doubly unfortunate that upon alighting from his machine he missed the catwalk on the lower airfoil and plunged both legs through the fabric, straddling a rib, from which he received a grievous personal injury. Some thought should be devoted to a means of identifying wing-traversing catwalks to assist aviators in disembarking from their various machines.

 TOP

 

A Collection of Flying Advice

"Keep the aeroplane in such an attitude that the air pressure is directly in the pilot's face."
- Horatio C. Barber, 1916

"When a flight is proceeding incredibly well, something was forgotten."
- Robert Livingston, "Flying The Aeronca"

"The only time an aircraft has too much fuel on board is when it is on fire."
- Sir Charles Kingsford Smith, sometime before his death in the 1920's

"Flexible is much too rigid, in aviation you have to be fluid."
- Verne Jobst

"If you can't afford to do something right, then be darn sure you can afford to do it wrong."
- Charlie Nelson

"Just remember, if you crash because of weather your funeral will be held on a sunny day."
- Layton A. Bennett

"I hope you either take up parachute jumping or stay out of single motored airplanes at night."
- Charles A. Lindbergh, to Wiley Post, 1931

"Never fly the 'A' model of anything."
- Ed Thompson

"Never fly anything that doesn't have the paint worn off the rudder pedals."
- Harry Bill

"Keep thy airspeed up, lest the earth come from below and smite thee."
- William Kershner

"When a prang seems inevitable, endeavour to strike the softest, cheapest object in the vicinity, as slowly and gently as possible."
- advice given to RAF pilots during W.W.II.

"Instrument flying is when your mind gets a grip on the fact that there is vision beyond sight."
- U.S. Navy "Approach" magazine circa W.W.II.

"Always keep an 'out' in your hip pocket."
- Bevo Howard

"The Cub is the safest airplane in the world; it can just barely kill you."
- attributed to Max Stanley, Northrop test pilot

"A pilot who doesn't have any fear probably isn't flying his plane to its maximum."
- Jon McBride, astronaut

"If you're faced with a forced landing, fly the thing as far into the crash as possible."
- Bob Hoover

"It occurred to me that if I did not handle the crash correctly, there would be no survivors."
- Richard Leakey, after engine failure in a single engine, Nairobi, Africa, 1993.

"If an airplane is still in one piece, don't cheat on it. Ride the bastard down."
- Ernest K. Gann, advice from the "Old Pelican"

"Though I Fly Through The Valley Of Death I Shall Fear No Evil, For I Am At 80,000 feet And Climbing."
- sign over the entrance to the SR-71 operating location on Kadena AB, Okinawa

"You've never been lost until you've been lost at Mach 3."
- Paul F. Crickmore

"The emergencies you train for almost never happen. It's the one you can't train for that kills you."
- Ernest K. Gann, advice from the "Old Pelican"

"If you want to grow old as a pilot you've got to know when to push it, and when to back off."
- Chuck Yeager

"Never fly in the same cockpit with someone braver than you."
- Richard Herman Jr, in "Firebreak"

"There is no reason to fly through a thunderstorm in peacetime."
- Sign over Squadron Ops desk at Davis-Monthan AFB, AZ, 1970.

"An airplane might disappoint any pilot but it'll never surprise a good one."
- Len Morgan

"To most people, the sky is the limit. To those who love aviation, the sky is home."
- Unknown


"Keep your wings level, and your ball centered."
By Tomy Jay

Life is simple. Eat, Sleep, Fly. 

TOP

 

 

 HomeMeetingsOfficersOps ProceduresMembershipDaedalian InfoLemayHonor Roll 

created April, 2001
"web-guy"
  Jim Maloney

Comments Welcome