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-   -   Luckiest Pilot alive? (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/637271-luckiest-pilot-alive.html)

NutLoose 7th Dec 2020 10:42

Luckiest Pilot alive?
 
You wouldn't believe this was possible..

https://midwestflyer.com/?p=12278



Fareastdriver 7th Dec 2020 11:44

Wasn't there a Vulcan pilot who ejected way below the seat parameters. As his parachute started deploying it got caught in some powers lines that fused the cords and the wires together and then the HT wires brought him to a halt.

He then swung down to the vertical and stepped out of his harness.

Captain Calamity 7th Dec 2020 12:11


Originally Posted by Fareastdriver (Post 10942279)
Wasn't there a Vulcan pilot who ejected way below the seat parameters. As his parachute started deploying it got caught in some powers lines that fused the cords and the wires together and then the HT wires brought him to a halt.

He then swung down to the vertical and stepped out of his harness.

Extract from the Board of Inquiry report relating to the crash of Vulcan XM604:

"The aircraft had rolled to port through at least 90 degrees but not more than 120 degrees, with a nose down angle of between 15 and 20 degrees when the Captain ejected from an approximate height of 300 feet by pulling the face blind. The blind partially covered the right side of his face because he only used his right hand to pull the face screen firing handle. Due to the attitude of the aircraft and the low height at the time of ejection the parachute had only streamed when the pilot passed through high tension cables close to the scene of the accident. The canopy caught one cable, pulled that cable onto the next one and caused an electrical short. This fused the nylon panels together which acted as a brake, and the pilot was lowered to the ground. As his feet touched he undid the quick release box and walked away."

bafanguy 7th Dec 2020 13:05

Another lucky pilot story:

https://uss-la-ca135.org/60/1960Judkins-Knott.html


diginagain 7th Dec 2020 13:40


Originally Posted by Fareastdriver (Post 10942279)
Wasn't there a Vulcan pilot who ejected way below the seat parameters. As his parachute started deploying it got caught in some powers lines that fused the cords and the wires together and then the HT wires brought him to a halt.

He then swung down to the vertical and stepped out of his harness.

Peter Tait, went on to create CHIRP.

Chu Chu 7th Dec 2020 14:12

230,000 kilovolt wires sound pretty scary . . .

ORAC 7th Dec 2020 15:10

I am reminded of a story from a book of lucky escapes relating the case of a P-51 pilot.

During a high speed dive one of the ailerons detached and the aircraft went into a high-G spiral where he blacked out. At some stage at low level the aircraft disintegrated and he was thrown clear sideways from the wreckage with part catching and pulling out the contents of his parachute pack which began to stream.

At this stage he passed through the top branches of some trees where the parachute turned his path just about fully horizontal before he then entered a corn field where he cut a gently descending groove across the field before coming to a halt with the remnants of the parachute stretched out behind him.

He reportedly awoke with no injuries.

Runaway Gun 7th Dec 2020 20:09

The pilot who put the entire detachment imprest, all on Black, and won?

NutLoose 7th Dec 2020 21:19

Did he share it out?

TheWestCoast 7th Dec 2020 23:12

The summary here about the U-2 incident is great -

LOC-I after pilot loss on conciousness at 14000ft.
Aircraft landed upright after clipping power cable.
Pilot regained conciousness and suffered an inadvertent ejection will climbing out of the cockpit and survived.

Airbubba 8th Dec 2020 01:44

Earlier PPRuNe discussion of the catatonic U-2 pilot here: U2 down in Northern California - Page 2 - PPRuNe Forums


Clearedtoroll 8th Dec 2020 07:57

I only recently heard about the lucky 1946 Northolt Dakota - almost looks faked (but isn’t)

https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail...photo/79044077

Timelord 8th Dec 2020 18:11

I cannot quote the details but there was a Red Arrows crash at Akrotiri a few years ago where each event in the damage sequence cancelled out the effect of the one before and the pilot survived against all the odds. Worth a read if anyone knows how to lay their hands on it.

57mm 8th Dec 2020 18:20

Watched that incident from the ASP. Curly was so nose down that we all thought he would auger in, but his pull and the seat performance saved him.

Big Pistons Forever 8th Dec 2020 18:41

I vaguely remember a story I read about an Italian (?) Military jet aerobatic team doing a show in very poor vis. One of the solo's saw a flash and the next millisecond second he is being blasted upwards in his ejection seat. His helmet had a slight groove which was later determined to be from the bottom of the tail skid of the other aircraft involved in the head on mid-air. The skid went through the canopy, creased his helmet and then pulled out the ejection handles at the top of the seat. The pilot reported he never saw the other aircraft and had the hit been a half inch lower it would have ended very badly for the him.

insty66 8th Dec 2020 19:16

Not a pilot but right up there in the lucky stakes is Jack Worsford.
"The Tail of his Lancaster was severed from the main Fuselage in mid-air. With his Parachute still in the main Fuselage, his rear Turret fell from 5,000ft. Fortunately for him, the twin Lancaster Tail assembly saved his life, spinning to earth like a sycamore seed and after hitting overhead cables and trees he survived to spend the rest of the War in captivity."
From https://tailendcharlietedchurch.word...-of-the-skies/


treadigraph 8th Dec 2020 20:06


Originally Posted by Big Pistons Forever (Post 10943124)
I vaguely remember a story I read about an Italian (?) Military jet aerobatic team doing a show in very poor vis. One of the solo's saw a flash and the next millisecond second he is being blasted upwards in his ejection seat. His helmet had a slight groove which was later determined to be from the bottom of the tail skid of the other aircraft involved in the head on mid-air. The skid went through the canopy, creased his helmet and then pulled out the ejection handles at the top of the seat. The pilot reported he never saw the other aircraft and had the hit been a half inch lower it would have ended very badly for the him.

Sounds like the Patrouille de France Alpha Jets that collided during opposition passes at Annemasse during a practice display. One pilot was ejected as described, the other landed safely at Geneva with a bent tailplane.

Bagheera S 8th Dec 2020 21:01

In 1982 a Hawk at Bedford was undertaking wake turbulence research when it experienced an uncommanded and very low roll;- 20ft. The pilot went out just fractional within the seat survival envelope, while the observer decided to stay in. The aircraft landed upside down and slid 1200ft down the runway. As the structure deformed and was worn away, the observer head was progressively held against the runway. The wreck came to a holt just as the Asphalt was wearing through the fabric next to the chaps scalp.

https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/55500

Tashengurt 8th Dec 2020 22:03


Originally Posted by Bagheera S (Post 10943183)
In 1982 a Hawk at Bedford was undertaking wake turbulence research when it experienced an uncommanded and very low roll;- 20ft. The pilot went out just fractional within the seat survival envelope, while the observer decided to stay in. The aircraft landed upside down and slid 1200ft down the runway. As the structure deformed and was worn away, the observer head was progressively held against the runway. The wreck came to a holt just as the Asphalt was wearing through the fabric next to the chaps scalp.

https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/55500

I seem to remember a helmet with such damage on a shelf in the human factors investigation section at RAFSAM Farnborough mid 90s?

Hydromet 9th Dec 2020 00:46


Originally Posted by Bagheera S (Post 10943183)
In 1982 a Hawk at Bedford was undertaking wake turbulence research when it experienced an uncommanded and very low roll;- 20ft. The pilot went out just fractional within the seat survival envelope, while the observer decided to stay in. The aircraft landed upside down and slid 1200ft down the runway. As the structure deformed and was worn away, the observer head was progressively held against the runway. The wreck came to a holt just as the Asphalt was wearing through the fabric next to the chaps scalp.

https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/55500

Was shown a motor cycle helmet in similar condition. The owner who showed me had come off in a race and was skidding along on his leathers & helmet. He was unhurt, but said that he knew what was happening, but couldn't get his head off the ground.


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