Grizz
Too much free time
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2004
- Posts
- 506
hawkercpt -
I was a military FCF pilot in all series of aircraft I flew and I have to agree with you. Doing a full maintenance check flight deserves special pay because things go wrong beyond anyone's reasonable expectations. It's a lesson that I learned a bunch of times but twice it almost cost me the ultimate price.
1) We picked up a EC-130 at a BHM - a depot level maintenance facility. They had been doing a center wing-box replacement mandated by the AF and Lockheed. I took off and within 30 seconds the scanner (loadmaster) was screaming, "Get this airplane on the ground!" on the intercom. I told the engineer to go take a look-see as I pulled a closed. About 30 seconds later, the engineer is on intercom, "Get this airplane on the ground!" My engineer and scanner tell me they're hearing very loud popping noises in the back. I turned base, landed the beast, and stopped straight ahead on the runway.
Come to find out, the maintenance facility was using the wrong size rivets on the center wing box and the noise they were hearing were rivets popping loose in flight. Another 3-4 minutes and the whole center wing box would have come undone. As far as I remember from basic aeronautics, wings are not optional in flight. Many beers were consumed that night by all.
2) A few years later, we were doing a complete FCF stall series on a B-1900 after two primary flight surface replacements. A complete stall series includes taking the aircraft to stall and determining the airspeed at stall warning, airspeed at full stall, seeing which way it breaks, etc. One of the props was rigged significantly differently than the other and it hit the stops pretty much at exactly the wrong time and it induced a serious spin. I can tell you that the spin recovery in a B-1900 isn't anywhere near as pretty as it is in a T-37. I was doing training for two instructors upgrading to FCF status on that flight and the pilot not on headset during that maneuver made the comment - "It's a good thing I wasn't on headset because you'd have heard me screaming like a little girl."
After abject lesson #2, I decided that I'd had enough of maintenance check flights. Thank goodness, I only had about 6 months to go before I retired and never faced that situation again.
I've picked the Citation X up at a service center a couple of times with a maintenance check flight due but so far it hasn't been anything other than pressurization or something like that. The moment it steps up into something serious - sorry Charlie...get someone else to play Race Bannon.
I was a military FCF pilot in all series of aircraft I flew and I have to agree with you. Doing a full maintenance check flight deserves special pay because things go wrong beyond anyone's reasonable expectations. It's a lesson that I learned a bunch of times but twice it almost cost me the ultimate price.
1) We picked up a EC-130 at a BHM - a depot level maintenance facility. They had been doing a center wing-box replacement mandated by the AF and Lockheed. I took off and within 30 seconds the scanner (loadmaster) was screaming, "Get this airplane on the ground!" on the intercom. I told the engineer to go take a look-see as I pulled a closed. About 30 seconds later, the engineer is on intercom, "Get this airplane on the ground!" My engineer and scanner tell me they're hearing very loud popping noises in the back. I turned base, landed the beast, and stopped straight ahead on the runway.
Come to find out, the maintenance facility was using the wrong size rivets on the center wing box and the noise they were hearing were rivets popping loose in flight. Another 3-4 minutes and the whole center wing box would have come undone. As far as I remember from basic aeronautics, wings are not optional in flight. Many beers were consumed that night by all.
2) A few years later, we were doing a complete FCF stall series on a B-1900 after two primary flight surface replacements. A complete stall series includes taking the aircraft to stall and determining the airspeed at stall warning, airspeed at full stall, seeing which way it breaks, etc. One of the props was rigged significantly differently than the other and it hit the stops pretty much at exactly the wrong time and it induced a serious spin. I can tell you that the spin recovery in a B-1900 isn't anywhere near as pretty as it is in a T-37. I was doing training for two instructors upgrading to FCF status on that flight and the pilot not on headset during that maneuver made the comment - "It's a good thing I wasn't on headset because you'd have heard me screaming like a little girl."
After abject lesson #2, I decided that I'd had enough of maintenance check flights. Thank goodness, I only had about 6 months to go before I retired and never faced that situation again.
I've picked the Citation X up at a service center a couple of times with a maintenance check flight due but so far it hasn't been anything other than pressurization or something like that. The moment it steps up into something serious - sorry Charlie...get someone else to play Race Bannon.