there's an active lightning here, taking tourists up to some crazy altitude. seems the quickest way to get there is to point a lightning up, then press go. .. you get the impression the wings were added because some safety legislation insisted that wingless craft be termed rockets. no no, this is an airplane, look, see? wings! navigation lights!
No helmet, no canopy, no radio, no ejector seat strapped into one of the most difficult to fly aircraft must of been terrifying. I'm glad he managed to land it ok...
actulay it is impresive that the british managed to copy one of the most creative bombers of all time (the dornier do335 was a bomber with a similiar configuration and the f104 was actualy planned for a similiar use but the lightning interceptor sounds like the better plane compared to the f104).
lrobert, are you sure you mean the Do 335 and not another model? The Do 335 was a twin prop engine, heavy fighter/bomber with the engines set up in a pusher/puller configuration. It bears no resemblance to the English Electric Lightning.
Truly Impressive!!! He knew how to fly, and knew landing was the hardest part. The landing speed of that Lightning is much higher than the top speed of either of the aircraft he was trained on. They should have upgraded his pilot's license. After all, He managed to land it and not make a mess (except for his shorts).
Reminds me of the ground crewman who got hung up on the tail of a Spitfire in North Africa 1943. He ended up doing a circuit around the airfield hanging on for dear life as the pilot, horrified by the image of him dangling in the air, attempted to land and not kill the man upon landing. The crewman only had a few broken limbs after landing and of course falling off when the plane touched the ground. A little later in the war the crewman was sent home after the Wing Commander learned the crewman had survived a Stuka attack in Italy that killed everyone around him and left him unscathed even though the bomb detonated only few meters away. The commander said "I don't need a third clue that God wants this man alive. Send him home...."
crazy brave is more like it. we all owe our lives to those WWII Vets or we would all be speaking Japanese or Nazi German right now. my father was at Pearl Harbor. his family had his funeral and gave away his stuff to those that needed clothes. they found him a week later floating amongst the debris. he even made the news papers as the first man to die in war from Greensboro. I still have the old news paper with the article of his passing. he passed in his sleep in 1984. I miss my father. Joseph C Glenn SR. BM first class. he would always refuse a raise in rank because he said he would not be able to be in the fight if he kept accepting rank advances. after retiring from the Navy after the Korean war fiasco. he retired again from the civil service. he was and still is my Hero. as is my Mother. Thank you for these great little stories. @@edwinhoffman141
@@dawhat84 "we all owe our lives to those WWII Vets or we would all be speaking Japanese or Nazi German right now." I mean... half of europe was under soviet control, they DID actually do mandatory russian language studies in schools and today, nobody speaks russian pretty much. I get what the saying means but it still wouldn't happen. Also nazi german is not a language :p
After retiring from the RAF Taffy went on to work for GEC Marconi Avionics in Milton Keynes. I joined the company in 1986 as a graduate Engineer and Taffy Holden became my first ever boss. A true gentleman and still an inspiration so many years later. RIP Taffy. Thank You.
In 2006 I was working as a helicopter-ski guide in Alaska. It was a very part-time gig - most of the time I was a corporate lawyer, but that was a bit boring so in 1994 I accepted the part time ski guide job. On Friday April 13 I was buried 2 meters deep in an avalanche for 13 minutes (until another guide was able to dig down to me - it took nearly an hour to dig all the way to my feet and release the ski bindings). Afterward, the migraine headaches that I’d had occasionally since childhood became so constant that I was unable to continue to practice law. Not PTSD - none of the secondary indicators was present. My doctor’s analysis - a 13 minute adrenaline surge sensitized my cranial vascular system and subsequently, even a small surge of adrenaline caused the dilation and contraction cycle associated with migraines.
Thanks for retelling this story. Holden was so traumatised by the episode that he was off work for two years with PTSD. His doctor state that "Holden went home and thought about what had happened, if he had gone straight to the mess and drunk a bottle of Whisky he would have been fine."
Excellent storytelling. Former USAF electrician who had to chase his fair number of difficult sparks I could well sympathize with needing to fix something in a crunch. It's a marvel he survived and no one got hurt, but a seeming miracle he kept his career, lol. And thanks for not leaving out the bit about what was causing the malfunction.
I was told this story 30 years or so ago by a friends Dad. I was later told be someone else it was fictitious and not possible. I now have it confirmed here.Thank you for confirming such a wonderful story.
You tell the story so well it made my toes curl. In '73 I was a student pilot at the flying club on naval air station Key West with only a few hours in a Cessna 150. The phone rang in the club office and it was the tower ordering all of our general aviation aircraft be moved behind the hangar within an hour. A C5 was making an unscheduled landing and they were afraid the wake would damage them. Another student and I were the only ones there so we grabbed all of the keys and had to start and taxi twin engine planes and whatnot hoping we didn't accidentally retract the landing gear. I can't imagine being launched in an open cockpit fighter jet without training....wow.
As a retired school teacher that include many years teaching history I can say your videos are excellent because you so often tell of the human element and not mere dates and places. That is, events from our past are not best understood by mere numbers and names but rather by learning of the the people who were there. It's people that make history come alive.
RPM , Absolutely! And it is the people that have altered the path of our planet, “for better or for worse, until death do us part.” The human part of the equation needs to be shared in order to understand not only that something good or bad happened, but how to prevent or reproduce the results as needed. Maybe these 3D Technicolor videos should be stirred into our educational experiences.
109 mph, (am howling - Mother was right, I did drive as if I was intending "Take off"!) Who knew, that 1977 Buick Century, (Candy Apple Red, w Factory installed Chrome Mags, that merely shown 85 mph, on the dash Speed Register, (it was during the petro conserving, gas shortage years of reduced Speed Limits to 55 mph) ...and I got a *"Warning Ticket"* from Tennessee State Trooper, Elmer Hatley, for doing "103.5 in a 55" - "But it only registers 85!", I said with clear astonishment. "It'll-go-faster Missey!", Replied Officer Hatley ... ...and I say:, that *Warning Ticket" "Is History worth Remembering"* ...
Steve Skouson had a run in tonight with an officer (good men, both of us) that took me right back to an event that is the source of my ptsd. Having trauma appear in one's psyche and psychology from an encounter reminds me just how real it is.
I was working at a VA hospital and walking behind a WWII veteran and overheard: My wife and I were at a restaurant and heard one veteran was telling another how to fake PTSD. Moreover, he was getting over $3000 per month tax free. He went on, I have never considered filing a claim but, if the government is giving money away...my family can use it.
You are welcome Sir. I’m an ex submarine gunner Navy Seal, Admiral, Ninja, test pilot for the Lightning fighter jet, and floral patio chair cushion cover designer! Thank me for my service. You’re welcome 😂 🥇🎖️🏅🥉🎖️🎖️🎖️🎖️🏅🏅🎖️🏅🎖️🏅 I was ordered the constipational medal of Oder by President Lincoln.
I work at what was RAF Lyneham, it’s now operated by the Army, but I love learning about the history of the place. Military trucks now carry out brake tests and recovery operations on the tarmac that Holden ‘taxied’ down.
Reminds me of the time I accidentally got on the wrong train after work and ended up getting home an hour late. What a stressful episode that was; brings me out in a cold sweat just thinlking about it.
At the end I say that Wing Commander Holden spent two years in the hospital. In fact, he spent two periods in the hospital, both much shorter than a year. I am sorry for the mistake. Some viewers have reminded me that the proper designation is runway 3-6, not runway thirty six.
Here is a quote from your intro,"an RAF ground crewman", I think he was hardly a crewman but the unit CO. A link from his grandson's blog about a visit to Duxford by the man himself, telling the story for the visitors: www.danrostron.com/2013/10/14/wing-commander-taffy-holdens-inadvertant-flight-in-lightning-xm135/
I'm in agreement with Mark... there is nothing wrong with the music. What's annoying is that someone would complain about it considering that the only place it exists is during the "Like, Share, Subscribe" portion at the very end.
I grew up in a RAF family on bases with Lightnings. My father would take me to the end of the runway to watch them take-off. The mention of its ability to go vertical after take-off is absolutely true. It blew my mind watching this as they would disappear from sight in that vertical climb. I also remember asking my father why they called it the flying brick and his response was that once it ran out of fuel it shared the same flying qualities as a brick.
@Jtan163: Chuck Yeager flew F-4's in Vietnam, and confirmed what a friend of mine (he was a F-4 instructor in the '70's) once said...F-4's are proof that with big enough engines, you can make anything fly. They're also said to have the glide ratio of a brick - about 1000' per mile. However, the F-104 was worse: lose the engine = eject.
Same here. But I sure would not change seats with Taffy. I really kind of feel sorry for poor guy. I just about got covered up in a mining blast. I got under best close thick metal I could find. Saved my life.
You’re welcome Sir. I’m an ex submarine gunner Navy Seal, Admiral, Ninja, test pilot for the Lightning fighter jet, and floral patio chair cushion cover designer! Thank me for my service. You’re welcome 😂 🥇🎖️🏅🥉🎖️🎖️🎖️🎖️🏅🏅🎖️🏅🎖️🏅 I was ordered the constipational medal of Oder by President Lincoln.
Sir, what an INCREDIBLE story!! As a retired aircraft mechanic myself, I've had a few hairy moments while testing aircraft for a variety of reasons. But NOTHING like what you portray here! To say the gentleman in the story was terrified at the time could be the understatement of a lifetime! What I wouldn't give to sit and talk with him, not only about his incident but how he came to grips with the fright at the time. Just knowing that he was living on borrowed time could make for a life altering experience. Sadly, he passed away some two years ago but I pray he is able to RIP and (no pun intended) soar with the Angel's. Lord knows that he deserves to. In closing, I wish to thank you so very much for your channel. I came upon it quite by accident and now I cannot get enough of your offerings. Have a great day and a SPLENDID weekend!
An unforgettable and traumatizing experience for Taffy Holden, and an amazing tale for me to hear. Thank you for your enthusiastic telling of this tale.
Think of how it would have gone if he was still living at home. "Did our boy have any trouble today?" "No, "our boy" didn't. But would like to hear what your son did that nearly gave me a heart-attack?" When he's your son "only" you know the news isn't good.
I have seen the Lightning a number of times. In fact it was the last aircraft, apart from the air sea rescue Sea Kings, to be stationed at RAF Leconfield, not far from where I live. It was so fast that it went supersonic while climbing just after takeoff for its very first flight. And despite the claims of others it was the first aircraft to use supercruise, the ability to go supersonic without the use of the afterburner. Saw it give a display at the BAE factory at Brough. It flow past just and the noise from it was awesome.
A great story. The mere fact that he didn’t panic is amazing enough. The fact that he survived the ordeal is truly amazing. I’m sure if I had to make the decision as to punishment, I would have said he went through enough and to let him be.
Over a the past two weeks, I’ve binge-watched every single THG video and thoroughly enjoyed them all. Thank you for your insights, your non-partisanship, your passion for history, and for taking the time to make this wonderful series of videos which encourages others to love history as much as you do.
My old flight instructor as a Lightening pilot. The first time he took off the ATC asked him to report passing 35000, he replied sorry just passed 45000 ft.
I’m an ex submarine gunner Navy Seal, Admiral, Ninja, test pilot for the Lightning fighter jet, and floral patio chair cushion cover designer! Thank me for my service. You’re welcome 😂 🥇🎖️🏅🥉🎖️🎖️🎖️🎖️🏅🏅🎖️🏅🎖️🏅 I was ordered the constipational medal of Oder by President Lincoln.
Amazing story, the first take away is that he did what was taught to every Pilot on the first day even in a Tigermoth. Don’t panic and first fly the aircraft. Duxford is truly a must and if you are lucky enough to do it the annual Airshow is probably the best in the world. Another great video!
The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered Is that a rare photo of you in the wild and in "civilian" clothes we saw there at the end of this video, History Guy? 😃 I absolutely agree on Duxford being worth seeing. But is should be noted that it is so big that just one full day won't do it justice. If you are an aviation nut like me, plan on at least a two-day visit!
I am going to use this at our next flight call to show the importance of waiting (rushing causes unforseen circumstances and cost more time,in the end), situational awareness, following yoyr training to think on yoyr feet when in a pickle, and because it is an all around good story. Thank you
History Guy I have re played this so many times ,, it’s just as you said a Rip Roaring Story. ,, your Best Ever ,, poor Taffy ,, I’m sorry he had such a Time Later ,, Still Excellent Rip Roaring Story What a aa Ride!!!
What a great little story. Thanks for sharing it. As someone who has suffered on and off for decades from the aftereffects of a brief life or death experience I know something of what Taffy went through later in his life. It's an odd thing, PTSD, and very hard to explain to others. While I have been in perhaps more danger both before and after my experience there is something about it that lives on in me and in a heartbeat I can be "back in the moment." It's an odd creature, the human mind.
I want to take a second to publicly thank you for what you do. We are surrounded by negativity on all sides, it seems. Your channel is an oasis, free from all that drama. You are obviously passionate about what you present and are one of the best teachers I've ever run across. You are passionate and it shows. Thank you for all you do and congratulations on 100k subs. You deserve a hundred times more.
Thank you, I remember reading about this story in the 70s as a school boy. One thing that saved him was the superb handling of the Lightening, unlike most fighters of the period i.e. F104, it was actually quite easy to fly if you could cope with the acceleration. It had a large wing area for a mach 2 fighter to give it good agility at high altitude, which when coming into land with the ground effect literally rounds it out to a smooth landing. Of course he almost got caught out by one of its few vices, its thin high pressure tyres (to fit in the thin wing) offered little grip, so stopping it was a problem. Also all service Lightnings had mach 2 capability, the idea the F1 was limited to mach 1.5 was because when working up for service some pilots experienced stability issues over mach 1.5 so a temporary limit was imposed, but was lifted after a mod to the power controls and the F1 had full mach 2 capability by the time it was declared fully operational.
@Nick Maclachlan I think I read it in World of Wonder or similar ( at some point World of Wonder was replaced by another magazine who's name I forget even though I preferred it) a children's magazine for "Geeky" children, but I guess it is the same source, no doubt a journalist pushing his story to publications with space to fill.
Accidental afterburner. With no canopy! AND no helmet! And in an unfamiliar cockpit? Yeah, I guess that would possibly cause some "Traumatic Stress". Let alone the specter of collision with a passenger airliner. Yeeks!
I also assume since he was at an airport/airfield at the same time all this was going on he was trying to look out for other planes landing or taking off. From a plane called a "Chipmunk" to a plane called "Lightning".
Brilliant! I'm ex RAF but didn't hear this story until after I left! Thanks for a nice clear and precise account! Taffy Holden must have been a very brave soul indeed!
I heard it as an air cadet while working for a day on Lightning's of No 5 Squadron during a Summer Camp at RAF Binbrook in 1982. The story teller however just said that a ground crew flew the aircraft and that no Ejection seat was fitted to the aircraft. Turned out that a member of my squadron's Civilian committee knew the story as well as her husband had been on the maintenance staff of the Air Fighting Development Squadron at RAF Coltishall and he had actually signed off the paperwork for XM135 after its delivery flight to the station from Warton by Jimmy Dell.
I’m an ex submarine gunner Navy Seal, Admiral, Ninja, test pilot for the Lightning fighter jet, and floral patio chair cushion cover designer! Thank me for my service. You’re welcome 😂 🥇🎖️🏅🥉🎖️🎖️🎖️🎖️🏅🏅🎖️🏅🎖️🏅 I was ordered the constipational medal of Oder by President Lincoln.
A dear friend of mine, now passed on, was a Cold War/Vietnam era U.S. Air Force fighter pilot. His favorite plane, in U.S. inventory, was the F-104 "Starfighter" and least favorite the F-100 "Super Saber" (think the infamous "Saber Dance"). Toward the end of his life, due to lung cancer, he often reflected on his career and stated that the only two jet fighters in the world that ever really "bothered" him....Assuming either one had ended up in enemy hands...Were the RAF "Lighting" and the U.S. Navy "Crusader". this video brought back memories of a friend that I made late in his life and a hero in my book. Thanks for, yet another, excellent video!
Interesting fact, Canada's main fighter is based on the Starfighter, but it's heavily upgraded and maintained, when it fought the f35, it went 20-0 and upheld it's 17 year straight victory's over USAF in joint training and exercise
Bee Mail What planet are you talking about...? Canada has not flown F 104 for a long long time...their main fighter is an FA 18 variant...interesting facts need to actually be facts...
+Bee Mail You sure seem to have in your possession a lot of "facts" that don't match up with reality. The CF-104 wasn't used as a dogfighter and it was retired a decade before the Joint Strike Fighter program that resulted in the F-35 went out for bid on development of prototypes. In addition, the CF-104 was only used in Red Flag exercises 3 times.
+Bee Mail - Interesting fact, your consumption of hallucinogens is causing you to live in a delusional state :) ... steven sowers & Markle2k do have it right. Incidentally, Interesting fact, our main (and only) fighter, the MD CF-18 (CF-188), was derived, in part, from design studies starting from the Northrup F-5 "Freedom Fighter" which was also in Canada's inventory, built under license by Canadair as the CF-5 (CF-116)
no-one deserves 100K subscriptions more than this channel - so congrats to both you and to the 100K smart enough to simply click the button and be both entertained and enlightened by the wonderful "snippets of history that deserve to be remembered"
Another great video. I teared up a bit thinking of the hilarity and terror of the man's predicament. He truly made the best of bad circumstances and saved his own life and maybe a few more in the process. Keep up the good work! I contribute every month.
I half expected a group of workmen to be carrying a huge glass panel across the runway next. Maybe a fruit cart? (OT, but I recently found out about the HMS Zubian for the first time the other day - she sounds like prime forgotten history materiel to me!)
The image of a series of glass panel carriers, mothers with prams, old ladies with walking frames, children playing ball and parked icecream vans etc one after the next, immediately shouted comedy sketch. There should be a driving experience game called Taffys Traffic Tuition, were you get to drive a lightning down roads n highways lol
Thank you for this story. Having spent 30 years in the Royal Air Force I have heard many different versions of this story. Thank you for finally telling me the truth.
When I was assigned to RAF Mildenhall 11 years ago I walked right passed that fighter jet and didn’t think anything of it. I was in awe of the black they had on display which was a black bird assigned to Mildenhall. Thank you for the video history guy that was a cool one!!!!
Lightnings used to buzz my communications tower when I was stationed in Germany. I love aircraft and would watch them swing by. Sometimes they would come so low and close that you could see the pilot and he'd wave at me. Nice memories
If you ever get tired of this history gig you’ve got a future in comedy! Those twelve minutes were funnier than any stand up routine I’ve seen in decades!
I had a career as an aircraft mechanic. I had the parking brake release while running up a 250 MPH turboprop plane. It was a terrifying 30 feet before I reapplied brake and got it stopped. I can imagine his ride.
If it is anything like a civilian airliner, when you run the engine at take off power, the brakes can't hold the plane still alone. You need to block those wheels, else it is going to run off on you.
We have had to do power runs on the KC-135 tanker aircraft. Doing this on icy parking spots, with only wheel chocks to hold it, didn't always keep the plane in place.
The Lightning.... Also known as "the flying blowtorch" unequalled in vertical climb by anything that wasn't made by NASA or the Soviet Space Agency. Top speed - way more than the "official" M2. A telling point is that when current generation fast interceptors were being developed, British Aerospace had to purchase back from Oman and Saudia Lightning T66 trainers which were the only operational aircraft left in the world that were fast enough to fly chase. Yes, even the heavier, far less aerodynamic twin seat trainer was M2 capable. A great shame the illustrations don't do justice to the article largely showing aircraft awaiting scrap at the end of their lives. Those who knew the aircraft in their glory days will never forget them. Flawed, yes but awesome in a way that nothing since has ever been.
I don't know if it is true but I read once that the lightning was the first aircraft to accelerate in a vertical climb. This was pointed out due to claims that the F15 had 50,000lbs of thrust in an aircraft weighing 40,000lbs and could accelerate going vertical.
I read an article, years ago, (from 1985), about a car magazine took some joy rides in military jets. The author wrote that even then, 1985, the top spaeed of the Lightning was still classified. Another article mentions a Lightning intercepting a U2. The States claim the U2 was already descending. On another note, the CF 105, Mk2, also had a power to weight ratio better than 1, with an estimated speed of M 2.5, without the putty in the windows softening too much. (Chopped up in 1959)
I heard a story about Concorde challenging the USAF to send up their best fighter aircraft to catch her! After they all failed along came a Lightning to wobble her wings to Capt Bannister in Concorde!!!
Andy, the Saudi Lightnings were single seat F53 and twin seat F55, there was never a T66 designation. And yes, I worked on Lightnings at RAF Binbrook for 5 years. Peace bud.
Poor Guy! He caught hell just trying to get a badly repaired plane serviceable! With No canopy, helmet or ejection, that guy was in hell! It was even worse when the plane is cooking afterburner and shooting faster than any bat outta hell! He's lucky to be alive and should get a comendation for 'above and beyond duty' to get that plane ready for service! Y'all Take Care, John
I vaguely remember this but either didn't know or had forgotten the details. I'm not surprised Taffy had 'emotional' issues, I have watched the Lightning fly at a number of airshows and the performance is staggering compared to any of it's contemporaries, no canopy, no radio to ask for guidance, I can't imagine the relief he must have felt when it not only landed but finally stopped. I have a few hours flying under my belt as an engineer, landing anything is 'emotional' !
I knew this story, but you have a fun way of telling it. I'm old enough to have seen operational Lightnings doing airshows. Watching one zoom down the runway and then go vertical upwards was stunning. And very loud! My favourite Lightning story is when Concorde was doing it's first afterburner tests. They used a Lightning as a chase plane, and when the Concorde pilot went to full reheat the Lightning could not keep up!
It's a good job Taffy managed to get the throttles out of reheat. Not only because landing with reheats engaged might have been problematic but because of that short range you alluded tovand the increased fuel consumption; quote from Lightning drivers, 'shortage of fuel was never a problem with the Lightning - until you started the engines.' Thanks for your channel - a recent and highly informative discovery.
@The History Guy Considering you mentioned the Victor bomber it is interesting to note that the last time one of them flew it was an accident as well. In 2009 on which was in taxiable condition but not considered flightworthy was supposed to make a high speed taxi run down a runway at an airshow for the crowd, but not go airborne. The non-pilot in the copilots seat was handling the throttles and panicked, advancing them to far and then freezing. Thankfully the man in the pilots seat, Bob Prothero, had flown the Victor in the 80's and managed to take control and get the plane into the air as it was drifting off the runway and successfully brought it around the airfield for a safe landing. Spectator video of the event is available here on youtube.
MW: The Victor did not go around the field. Merely lifted off and settled back on the runway. The copilot was in fact a formerly qualified pilot. He goofed.
What a wonderful and amazing story. A chain of events which reminded me of the F106A that landed itself after the pilot ejected from an unrecoverable flat spin (!)
He may not have been a test pilot before he took off but he surely was when he finally managed to land. Holden had flow more than the Tiger Moth. He qualified on the Harvard, or T-6, a much more powerful airplane, although still a tail dragger. He was qualified on the twin engine Airspeed Oxford, yet another tail dragger, and had flown as the co-pilot on the P-2 Neptune, a much larger twin engine aircraft, and one which finally had tricycle landing gear. He had flown as a second seater in the Javelin, a subsonic British fighter, and the Canberra bomber, but only assisting other qualified pilots. The whole concept of safely taking off and landing an aircraft like the Lightning is like a ten year old being able to successfully drive a Formula One car. One bit of correction. Holden didn't spend two years in the hospital. He spent two periods of a couple weeks each in the hospital over a period of a couple years getting psychiatric help for the extreme anxiety of that 12 minutes of flight. [Edited to correct my usual typos]
Indeed, although I would have needed at least two years in the hospital to get over that. Some guys are just natural pilots, and Holden seems to have been one of them.
Sar Jim " The whole concept of safely taking off and landing an aircraft like the Lightning is like a ten year old being able to successfully drive a Formula One car. " You can shorten it to getting the F1 car moving via clutch. Although stopping in the 'pit box' was probably just as skillfully lucky...
Michael Free I was just thinking about Holden's feat again today, trying to decide how many times I would have been hollering "Oh Shit !!!" during that twelve minute flight.
Oh gosh, I could see it all coming as you began to paint the picture. You gave this retired USAF Tech Sergeant a good laugh. By the way, the music is fine. Looking forward to hearing more stories. Please consider telling the story of Sgt. Stubby of WWI fame. Best Regards....
I’ve always been a history fanatic and I’ve always loved watching documentaries, and I must say your videos are just WAY TOO AWESOME! I love these things. And they’re always just long enough to give us a good amount of information and yet short enough not to bore us with too much information!
I recall seeing a similar story about a USAF F-86 accidentally taking off with an enlisted airman engine tech aboard. No helmet, no chute, not even strapped into the seat. From an article, "Mind If I Borrow It?" by Paul D. Mather, in Air and Space Magazine, NOV 2011. Ground technician had permission for high speed taxi run on runway to test brakes. F-86Fs rotate at 105 Knots. He held it too long and was suddenly airborne. AFC Johnson, George R. , 20 years old, was very familiar with pilot's handbook for that A/C and had a whole 2 hours dual time in Piper Cubs... He did have radio [mic and headset] and called tower advising them the plane was in the air and asking instructions. He was told to orbit over desert about 8-10 miles away from habitation. A pair of F-86 chase planes were scrambled to assist him. They coaxed him in to a safe landing. Incident happened at Williams AFB, Mesa, AZ in 1956. CO wanted to let him off, but decided that there would be a rash of joyrides if no example was set. Court martial found he did not intentionally steal aircraft, but found him liable for $200 damage to plane's nose equipment [as he did not trust the brakes and let the plane coast into the runway end barrier cables]. On a 3rd charge of flying without orders, he was acquitted, as it only pertained to officers. He was fined $390.00, reduced in rank to Airman Basic and pulled 5 months in the base guardhouse. Then he was returned to duty, but at a desk. He had a tour in WesPac. Johnson did not reenlist.
Amazing story, not heard that one before. Thanks. How about vids about Margaret Horton, who in 1945 took a ride clinging to the tail of a Spitfire or Flight Sergeant Nicholas Stephen Alkemade who in 1944 jumped from a burning Lancaster bomber at 20,000ft, sans parachute - and lived to tell the tale. Keep up your sterling work
Wow, that was something I had never learned about. I experienced something about the same but much, much slower. I was being instructed in learning to fly a ultralight aircraft and had never soloed before. One day my instructor wanted me to perform some fast taxi's on my own and little did I know that the thrust line was not set correctly and I suddenly found myself airborne and not enough runway left to set back down. My taxi run ended up being a solo flight of about 45 minuets while the instructor kept radio contact with me and guided me to a safe landing. I will never ever forget that flight nor the many of hours in my own plane after that day.
How is this for British understatement. I was in the RAF from 1970 until 1980 as ground crew. I served at Little Rissington until 76 when it was closed. Then on to Lyneham on C130's until 1980. I remember reading a report in an official (in house) RAF magazine named 'Air Clues'. It described the events that you portray so well here, but the summing up at the end was pretty much as follows. Wing Commander Holden while airborne found himself with no ejection seat, no canopy and no radio. A most unenviable position to be in. ----- I love your work Sir. Thank you for some really interesting Video and a very excellent style of narration to boot.
I saw a Lightning fly past me when I was 6 and living on the island of Rhodes Greece. I was several hundred feet up on a hill and it was almost level with me and less than a quarter mile away. The memory of it is still quite alive. I had no idea they were such a Badass fighter at the time.
I enjoy these little history snippets very much. No problem with the music for me. The clip length is just right for a moment of relaxation while watching. Thanks for doing these.
THG. Find any more these stories please post. History is not always so serious & some people call boring. After 2 years just had watch this 1 video again. Poor Taffy.