Quote:
Originally Posted by FellaGaga-52
What made you want to be a pilot as a boy when if you wreck, you're dead? Any big emergencies in your career?
Part of it might have been that my father was a Naval Aviator (USNA ‘50), but he never talked about flying at home when I was a kid..perhaps some kind of understanding with my mother. For some reason, I was just taken with the idea of flight.
I might have never acted on it, but things just came together when I graduated college. I got motivated to graduate early after realizing that not everyone had a free ride courtesy of their parents. Many of my friends worked while attending college. I felt a little guilty and, even though I had a partial scholarship (National Merit), I decided to save my dad a semester of cost. Duke tuition was $4000/year at the time...a princely sum.
So I was at home after Christmas and looking for a job. One of our neighbors, Jim Cheboneaux, was at “cocktail hour” at my parents’ house (a time honored tradition of the time) and he talked up flying with me.
Jim had flown 100 missions in the P-51 in Korea and then went to work for the CIA, flying the U-2 in the late ‘50s. (He was the backup pilot for Gary Powers for the flight that was shot down by the Russians.) He had just used the GI Bill to get his flight instructor certificate and offered to teach me for free. What a great deal! I put the job search on hold, rationalizing that my early graduation was the perfect excuse to pursue my dream.
But after one lesson, Jim accepted a job with NASA at Moffett Field (San Jose) as head of their High Altitude Missions branch (civilian U-2 operations). At this point I was hooked. Jim recommended another CFI and I got my PPL 4 months later (June 77).
As to your second question, I think I declared an emergency twice in my airline career, not counting three medical emergency diverts (all in the same year). One was for a cargo fire warning while on approach at IAD which turned out to be a false alarm. The other was a main power bus failure on the MD-88 flying into LGA on a VMC day. Neither instance amounted to much.
In GA flying, I’ve had two engine failures in single-engine 4-seaters. The full stories on those are in this thread. Briefly, the first was a partial engine failure in a Grumman Tiger (one cylinder had swallowed a valve). I couldn’t maintain altitude and declared an emergency, landing at Phillips AAF, Aberdeen Proving Grounds.
The second was a complete engine failure in a Mooney Executive. I was at 7000’ IFR in clouds and extremely heavy rain at the time. That was by far the most serious single episode in my flying experience. By the grace of Crom, I lived to tell about it.