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Praetorium Honoris

Friday, August 15, 2025

W0X0F

 


One of my most cherished possession is an autobiography “I could never be so lucky again”.  As anyone who has read any of my posts on this blog might surmise, that could be the title of my biography. I would agree.  However, it actually is General Jimmy Doolittle’s autobiography and I have a signed copy. I read it again this past week. Most people are familiar with General Doolittle receiving the Medal of Honor for leading the Raid on Japan from the USS Hornet.  But this pioneering aviator had many other successes that paved the way for aviation in the US Military to be so successful in all theaters in WWII.

I’m going to focus on one aspect that many pilots, and passengers, take very much for granted, but which 85 years ago, was NOT possible.  Instrument Flying.  To quote from Sarge’s favorite reference source:
Doolittle's most important contribution to aeronautical technology was the development of instrument flying. He was the first to recognize that true operational freedom in the air could not be achieved unless pilots developed the ability to control and navigate aircraft in flight, from takeoff run to landing rollout, regardless of the range of vision from the cockpit. Doolittle was the first to envision that a pilot could be trained to use instruments to fly through fog, clouds, precipitation of all forms, darkness, or any other impediment to visibility; and in spite of the pilot's own possibly confused motion sense inputs. Even at this early stage, the ability to control aircraft was getting beyond the motion sense capability of the pilot. That is, as aircraft became faster and more maneuverable, pilots could become seriously disoriented without visual cues from outside the cockpit, because aircraft could move in ways that pilots' senses could not accurately decipher.
Instrument panel back then.
By United States Air Force (USAF) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Not so different now. similar arrangement
By US Navy (http://www.deagel.com/library2/) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons


Yeah, yeah, yeah, Juvat…a long time ago, people crashed because they couldn’t fly instruments, so what.  Well….

So, There I was…..*  Holloman AFB, New Mexico and I’m an AT-38B Instructor Pilot.  It’s a clear, cool winter day and I am in the back seat with a brand new 2Lt fighter pilot wannabe in the front seat.  We’ve got an 0500 brief for an 0700 takeoff on a range mission.  During this mission, the young stud up front will point his nose at the ground at a speed of 450 knots, and dive angles of between 10 and 30 degrees, and drop 6 x  25Lb practice bombs (Their nomenclature was BDU-33, hence my confusion in later life when I found out that BDUs were uniforms, not bombs.)  Following delivery of said ordnance, we will practice dry strafe passes until reaching Bingo Fuel and then return home.  Since the weather is forecast to be clear, we will use Visual Flight Rules requirements for minimum fuel which IIRC was being on initial with 1000 lbs of fuel.

It’s a beautiful morning.  There is no wind, it’s fairly cool, so the aircraft will perform well on takeoff and should be stable in the bombing pattern and not require much offset for wind displacement, Assuming the kid up front can control dive angle and speed, (never a certainty), he should have some decent scores.  There’s nothing like hearing “Shack two” from the Range Control Officer to build a budding fighter pilot’s confidence.  (Note I said confidence, not ego.  They are different.)

Takeoff is normal, the range work is acceptable, except my student has a regrettable habit of using throttle to maintain spacing in the pattern rather than cutoff, so we’re a bit lower on gas than lead.  Finally we call Bingo, rejoin and head for home. 

Visibility is so good, we can see the field from the range, so we’re headed directly to the pattern’s visual entry point and we switch to the tower frequency.  We contact them and find out several things, all bad.

 First, the weather is now W0X0F (pronounced Wok’s Off, which is good if you’ve just completed cooking a Chinese Dinner, not worth a darn if you’re airborne in a jet).  W0X0F means “Indefinite Ceiling Zero Visibility Zero Due To Fog”.  Translated means if you’re on the ground looking up, the sky is clear.  If you’re in the air, looking down, you can see fine.  But if you’re trying to see anything straight ahead, you can’t see squat.  And the Supervisor of Flying is reporting that the fog goes to about 200’ above the ground. 

We can’t do an overhead as we’ll lose the field just about the overrun, not good.  So, we’ll have to get vectored for individual approaches. Flight lead clears us off.  We are vectored out over White Sands as we’ll be landing to the north.  I don’t recall why, I’m pretty sure this was the only time I landed in that direction.  In any case, we’re over White Sands headed south as the SOF asks us if we want to divert to Ft Bliss/El Paso International.  I’m doing some fierce calculations, and as best I can figure, it’s going to be close either way, but I’m pretty sure I don’t have enough fuel to get to El Paso. 

We tell the SOF, it’s Holloman or bust.  Now, I’m also strategizing with my student.  I’m going to fly the approach, he’s going to look out front and let me know when he sees the runway.  The decision I've got to make is whether or not to switch control to him and he makes the landing or whether I keep control and trust that when he says he sees the runway, I can look up, find the runway and make the transition from instruments to visual and land. 

No good answers.  But Switching Control at a critical point and not very high above the ground doesn't seem the best answer to me.  I tell him I’m going to keep the aircraft, but he needs to be sharp about it, because we don’t have fuel for a go around.  I fly the approach and am on course, on glideslope all the way down.  We’re a little above decision height and the student hasn't said anything.

We’re at decision height (the altitude where you make the decision to land or go around) nothing.

 We’re at min altitude, nothing.

 I pause for a nanosecond and am just about ready to push up power, when the student says  “I see it!”

 I glance up and see nothing.  I’m on glideslope, on course, should be right there! I glance out the right side and see mobile and the edge of the runway.  Pull the power back, hold the stick position and drop it on to the runway.  Lower the nose, hit the brakes and Magically Delicious, we are underneath the fog. The bottom of the fog was about 8’ above ground.

We taxi clear of the runway and elect to shut down in the arming area.  Crew Chief said later we wouldn’t have made it back to parking.

General Doolittle
By Hephaestos at en.wikipedia [Public domain], from Wikimedia Commons


In 1932, General Doolittle, landed an aircraft without any visual reference to the ground.  50 some odd years later, I basically did the same, but I couldn't have done it, if he hadn't done it first. Maybe sometimes it's not the heroic things you do in your life that affect the world and future generations the most.  Maybe it's the ordinary things.

1 comment:

  1. The only similarity between a C-150 and an AT-38B is the same aerodynamics apply. The day I took my Instrument Check ride the weather was rotten with high winds. From the old Denver Stapleton to the Denver VOR took eight minutes with many applications of carb heat. Shot a decent VOR approach to Weld County (Greeley) airport then back to Denver. Then it was hood down, unusual attitude, then correction. We had a ladder in the back of the C-150 to check fuel caps and I heard it thump against the bulkhead. "You got it", said the check pilot. No airspeed, horizon showing 70°+ angle, low r.p.m, ROC showing rapid decent. "Ah hah", says I, "Stall" Level the horizon, slight forward yoke, add power and recovery. He then took control, told me to take off the hood but not to talk, and flew us back to Stapleton. His landing into a strong, gusting 30° crosswind wasn't anything to be proud of. We went into his office and he signed me off. His only remark was I didn't report leaving altitude on the VOR approach.

    Later he debriefed my instructor who told me the check pilot took an instant dislike to me but that "I could handle a stick". Guess he didn't like the beard halfway down my chest.

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