----- Original Message -----
From:
"Philip Viener" <keeperv@worldnet.att.net>
To: <e_s_smalley@sprynet.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 01, 2002 9:16 PM
Subject: F-106B S/N
57-2509
Don't know if you're still interested in info concerning this
F-106B
accident, but I was the Disaster Preparedness Officer at Hamilton
AFB
when
this happened, and I can tell you Doug B. is a little off on his
facts.
The 106B in question was not part of a formation - they were on
their
own
after a night training ride - night IFR currency check, I
think. The
pilot
in for the currency check flew it into the lights
(and busted the ride),
and
the check pilot took it around after they
contacted the lights. Once he
realized they weren't going to fall out
of the sky, there was time to
get
the field ready for them.
Emergency crews head out, and another F-106
up
at
the time tried to
verify he had three gear down, but it was too dark.
Somehow, the 106B still
had three green lights on the landing gear
indicator
(or so the pilot told
me the next morning when he visited the crash
site)...so down the wounded
aircraft comes. A mutual decision not to
foam
the runway was made (I
heard because it was too damn messy to clean up
after!).
He did a pretty
good job of flying it, too - he got written up in the
ADC
magazine a few
months later for saving the plane. However, even though
he
held the
left wing off as long as he could, the 106 landed at such a
high
rate of
speed, he could only do so much. As soon as the left
gear
touched,
the gear collapsed and the two guys inside were
passengers. The plane
left
the runway and described a long arc that
aimed it directly at...
...not only the large group of parked aircraft Doug
described, but it
also
scattered the emergency crews waiting in front of
Base Ops. The Fire
Chief
told me the next day he thought for sure
there would be funerals, as
people
just scattered and emergency vehicles
tried to get out of the way. The
106B
had gone between six parked
106s before it took aim at the emergency
vehicles. By this time the
plane's slowing down some, but it's still
kicking up a shower of sparks on
the asphalt ramp, and it heads between
two
hangars (right down the yellow
taxi strip somehow) and disappears from
sight
of the tower.
This
was the first night in years Hamilton had a designated
Supervisor
of
Flying working in Base Ops, and the SOF that night was Capt.
Tom
Hedgecock,
a good friend of mine who at that time was about 90 days
short of
getting
out of the service.
Just about the time the plane
disappeared between the hangars, Tom
picked
up
the phone and called me
at my off-base residence. He was totally
incoherent, but I managed to
figure out a plane had crashed and that I'd
better go to work. I
doubled just about every speed limit on the way
in,
came screaming up to
the guard shack at the base entrance and yelled at
the
guard "Where's the
crash site?"
"What crash site?" was his reply. I began to suspect
things might not
be
as
bad as Tom had indicated...
Meanwhile,
the 106B has crossed Hangar Avenue, which ran parallel to the
runway but at
least 1.5 miles away, and finally come to stop going the
wrong
way on a
one-way street. These two guys were definitely blessed - they
stopped
less than 30 feet from a building full of tanks of compressed -
and
very
explosive - gases. The check pilot had presence of mine to
shut
the
engine down just after they left the runway, and there was no
fire, but
fuel
was leaking out of the left wing tank.
But they were
nowhere near the O Club, and the story they stepped out of
the
plane and
into a quick one is a canard. In fact, they were less than a
block from
my office. According to the pilot, once the plane
stopped,
they
egressed with all possible speed and ran like hell to get
away from the
plane, which they thought was going to go up in a ball of flame
at any
second. And the worst part was they both almost got run over by
the
fire
trucks that had finally caught up with them after losing them in
front
of
Base Ops...
And that's the truth. The one possibly
apocryphal part of the story I
heard
was that an airman was driving home
from work down the one-way street -
the
right way - when suddenly this
airplane appeared right in front of him.
Airman manages to stop short of a
collision. Supposedly, this airman
had
been drinking on the job, but
immediately swore off the stuff and never
had
another drink. Can you
imagine trying to explain that one to your
insurance
agent? "Yes, I
was hit by a driver going the wrong way on a one-way
street.
The other
vehicle? An F-106B..."
Hope this helps - or at least clarifies some
things. And thanks for
bringing back some memories.
Philip S.
Viener
1 Lt, 4661 ABGp
Hamilton AFB 1971-1972