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Praetorium Honoris

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Vegas, Part Deux (repost)

 

 This is also a repost.  Vegas was a big influence in not only my USAF career but in my life also.  Wanted to finish the story.  Great story about a great leader.

So there I was…an At-38B Instructor Pilot at Holloman Airplane Patch New Mexico.  I’ve been there about two years and my non-flying duty is squadron scheduler.  I have been blessed with a “good deal”, and I have made the most of it.

Current Wing Policy is that all senior Wing Personnel will receive check rides from the Chief of Stan-Eval.  The actual name is Standardization and Evaluation, most of us called them Stan Evil.  Ostensibly the requirement for the Wing King and the like to get their check rides from the Branch Chief was to reduce the likelihood of “undue Command Influence” in passing their check rides.  Works for me!  A Lieutenant Colonel looking for a Squadron to Command and therefore, earn his ticket to Bird Colonel.  No possibility for influence there…..

In any case, those thunderstorms raged far, far above my limited horizon.  My immediate problem was simple.  I had busted the Director of Operations (The number three guy in the Wing, call sign Vegas) on his last ride before his check ride.  Apparently, he had forgotton everything he’d learned in his 4000+ hours of flying about landing a jet, therefore he required another practice ride and his Check Ride was scheduled for tomorrow.



The Chief of Stan-Eval had booked a cruise for the day after and would not be available for the next two weeks. When dealing with the gods, scheduling is important.

I get back into the squadron, and the squadron CO is waiting for me.  Already having  been chastised by Vegas for having questioned my busting him on the ride, he asks me what my intention is.  I look at the schedule and see a three ship of IPs scheduled  for a continuation sortie.  Continuation sorties were missions where the IPs flew front seat and actually got to fly the jet and remain proficient at flying a fighter.  Students may or may not get to tag along in the back seat. Didn’t get a lot of them and these three guys were going to go out and fly a 2 V 1.  This was about as fun and complex a mission as we were allowed.  Highly sought after. Schedulers were able to get IPs to do all sorts of unpleasant things on the promise of a continuation ride.

I walk up to the schedule, draw a line through the 1 in the 2 V 1 and wrote Vegas and my name in.  The IPs would now be going on a 1 V 1.  Vegas and I would get our refly.  I was not popular.

Obviously, this ride was going to be later in the day and at Holloman during the summer, a later sortie made everything just a little bit more difficult.  The pressure altitude was higher, the engines responded different, winds were gusty, dust frequently blew so visibility was worse.  In short, for a person having difficulty landing a jet, flying late in the afternoon could make or break him.

We blast off, go to the area for a few minutes just to get down to landing weight, then return to the pattern for touch and go’s.  I’m a bit tense, but Vegas doesn’t seem to be worried.  He flies down initial, pitches out, configures, starts the turn, rolls out on speed and greases the landing.  Requests closed, granted, rolls out on downwind, configures, starts the turn, rolls out on speed and greases the landing.  Starts the go around, and says, “You want to fly the rest?”

I clearly had passed the test.

It’s now towards the end of the program.  Vegas had flown with other IPs, but I still was his primary IP.  We’re now in the first ride in the Air to Ground phase and Vegas is in the front seat.


 Once he sees the bombing range from the front seat, he will switch to the back seat and “instruct” me in Air to Ground techniques. Truthfully, I’m looking forward to it.  We had just completed Air to Air, and having him in my back seat instructing me (note the lack of quotation marks), had been VERY educational both for my IP skills as well as my actual Fighter Pilot skills.  I was looking forward to experiencing the same in Air to Ground. 

We’ve been to the range, dropped our 6 blue practice bombs and headed home.

We’re coming down initial for runway 16 and I hear the tower clear a flight of 4 F-15s on to runway 25 to hold. 

We pitch out, configure, turn final for a Touch and Go.  Roll out on final, I do a quick look out the nose of the Jet to check lineup, configuration etc.  (I’m still the Aircraft Commander, and IP, it’s my butt if something happens.)  As expected, Vegas is on the numbers.  I glance out the right side of the jet as we cross over the overrun….

Pause for a scenario setting .  Runway 16 and Runway 25 butt up against one another.  The overruns intersect.

The problem will occur in the light gray area at the top center of the photo.

Clearing a flight on to hold, gives that flight permission to do just that.  Taxi into position and sit there until given clearance to do something else.

It does not give you permission to run your engines up to military power in anticipation of takeoff!!

So, enough interlude.  I glance out the right expecting big wide exhaust nozzles  from 8 Pratt and Whitney F-100 Engines .
What I'm expecting when looking at exhaust nozzles

instead, I see little bitty teenie exhaust nozzles spewing exhaust gas across our approach at who knows how fast.
This is what F-15 engines look like in Mil Power and what I'm seeing


I advance the throttles into afterburner, while at the same time calmly communicating to Vegas that I was going to take command of the aircraft and would he please let go of the stick (I slammed the throttles to AB while I screamed “I got it!!”), just as we hit the turbulence.

The jet rolled to the left, and my guardian angel kicked in at that second, because my expected reaction should have been to roll back right.  I didn't, I added right rudder, which yawed the nose away from the ground as well as countered the rolling moment. I have no idea where that reaction, the only and absolute right move, came from.   I’m not sure what the angle of bank was, but I have a very clear picture of looking up at the runway.  The jet begins to yaw the nose above the horizon while rolling back towards level. We exit the turbulence as the aircraft rights itself.  I clean the gear and flaps up and remember the burners.  About this time, Vegas calls from the front seat and says “Well, that was exciting, do you mind if I fly the full stop?”  “No Sir, not at all.”

These guys practice it,  me, not so much!

Full stop, and Vegas asks what happened.  He’d never seen the four ship and all he knew was we had almost lost control.  I explained what had happened.  Debrief began later than usual that day as my student was unavailable.  Evidently, a flight lead lost his flight lead status.

About 6 months later, I’m now the Wing Scheduler and am up for assignment.  The F-4 is being phased out and F-15s and F-16s are starting to be assigned.  However, the AF still needs folks assigned to F-4Gs as well as F-111s, so the policy is that IPs  up for assignment in the next 6 months will be divided into Top Half/ Bottom Half.  Top Half will get the jet of their dreams; Bottom Half will get needs of the AF.  I’m fairly certain I’m in the Top Half, but, since I also want to be assigned with my wife, also military, and 2 year old son, I’m a bit tense.  Today is the day.  I get the call from my assignment officer.  F-4G to George.  I’m disappointed, but it is with my wife, so that’s the way the ball bounces. 



Vegas also knows this is the day.  He comes walking in to my office and asks what I got.  I tell him, his jaw drops and he says “Captain, can I borrow your desk?”  Dials an number and says (I’ve forgotten the name, so let’s use Stan)”Stan, Vegas here, do you personnel wienies still subscribe to the Top Half/Bottom Half policy?....Well, I’d like to know why Juvat here, my number one guy in this assignment tranche, is getting an F-4G? …..Yeah, I know about his wife…..Look, Colonel, I've got a retention problem here (he did) and if I can’t get my number one guy a new jet, what am I going to tell the rest of the guys to keep them in the AF? Why should they stay? I want him in an Eagle, and I want his wife assigned to the same base.” 

At that instant, it no longer mattered to me what my assignment was, I was reassured there were still people in the AF that cared about their people.  I would stay.


There’s more conversation on the phone, finally Vegas hangs up and says “Juvat, you and Mrs. Juvat are going to Kadena.”

 
Vegas, wherever you are in the Afterlife, I can't say Thank You enough! Leader, Teacher, Warrior, I learned a lot of that from you. Rest in Peace!
 


22 comments:

  1. That is a great story, Juvat. Nothing like seeing a leader stand up for his people.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That was a good story! He was a good guy to work for, they were rare in my 20+ years, most were simply the guy in charge.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Rob,
      Even worse were the guys with rank and out for themselves and no one else. They seemed to coagulate at that building on the Potomac. I think Pentagon is Ancient Greek for "absolute hell on earth".
      juvat

      Delete
  3. A heartwarming story, that kind of person is rare. Good training and instincts on that reaction juvat.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nylon,
      If I didn't believe in guardian angels before that incident, I certainly did afterward.
      juvat

      Delete
  4. He new how to build loyalty, buth personal and unit, and realized that loyalty worked both ways. You were blessed to have him as your physical guardian angel.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Joe,
      Yeah he did and yes I was and even better I knew I was.
      juvat

      Delete
  5. Now there was a real mensch!

    Rare they are, rarer still at higher levels. I knew a few, would've gone into Hell with them, knowing that he/she would get us back.(Yup, one of my most outstanding leaders was a female major in Germany, lady knew her stuff and took care of her people.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sarge,
      Agreed. I happen to live with a female officer (ret) like that.
      juvat

      Delete
  6. Wonderful story. How things are supposed to happen.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. HTom,
      Thanks, and when they do, much more to be thankful for.
      juvat

      Delete
  7. I think I'm either having a brain-mush moment, or Runways 22 and 25 are transposed in your story/diagram?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A Bear,
      Awww, Crap! You're right.
      Oops. Doesn't really change the story though. That intersection was where it was.
      juvat

      Delete
  8. That is about as scary a thing as I've read. Innocuous one second, then near death terror. God watches out for aviators and other idiots. Thankful personally for that. I can remember a few map points where I came entirely too close to the dirt nap.

    Did Vegas run that Thud down the Ridge?? Ye Gods.....

    ReplyDelete
  9. STxAR,
    Yep, flying a fighter does not allow much leeway in not paying attention. Since we were already in a steep bank, the wings weren't providing much lift in the up direction. Stepping on the rudder yawed the nose above the horizon as it rolled the jet level, and thankfully the burners were going. I still don't know where that move came from, but I'm here to talk about it, so...
    Yes he did in his first tour in Vietnam. He did a second tour a couple of years later in the F-4. As I said, he had an awful lot of "Been There, Done That" credibility.
    juvat

    ReplyDelete
  10. I can’t explain it, but it just got a little dusty here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Skip,
      It does get a bit dusty when folks do the right thing by the people they work for, the people they work with and the people that work for them. Doesn't seem to happen all that often any more. And that might just be why.
      Wouldn't it be nice if that was the way it is?
      Just sayin'.
      juvat

      Delete
  11. Replies
    1. Well, THAT was screwed up.
      Anyhow, Tree Mike, I hope you liked the last picture, Vegas and his Thud, loaded for bear.
      juvat

      Delete
  12. Yep, great picture, brings back memories. The Thuds were Sluggish when loaded (make an appointment for acceleration), but hauled ass slick. They carried a heavier load than a B-17 or B-24 (really, look it up). Thanks for the stories.

    ReplyDelete

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