In this particular case, it seems that the control cables, which run through a number of pulleys connecting the joystick in the cockpit to the elevator on the tailplane, had somehow been switched around on one of the pulleys, in error. Instead of the nose of the aircraft pitching up when the stick was pulled back, it did the opposite and pitched the nose downwards.
The only thing that prevented a tragic and almost certainly fatal accident from happening that day, was that a wide-awake young SAAF pilot was at the controls. Perhaps that is the most fitting testimony that I can give to the excellence of the Wings Course training given to SAAF pilots.
In the flight tests themselves, every imaginable aerobatic manoeuvre was carefully carried out to ensure that the aircraft was operating within its design parameters. The last stage of the test flight was my least favourite and involved spinning the aircraft from a great height, with the pilot holding it in the spin, to complete a full eight rolling, pitching and yawing revolutions before recovery was initiated. This exercise was guaranteed to expose any latent defect resulting from the major service, and naturally the ‘scribing’ was done after the aircraft had (hopefully) returned to straight-and-level flight after the extended spin. This type of flying was quite obviously nerve-jangling and not for the faint of heart.
During this period, about 40 Harvards went to Durban for the weekend, each carrying a crew of two under the guise of a ‘long navigation exercise’. Thirty-eight of the Harvards were crewed by trainee instructors and their respective tutors. I flew in one of the remaining aircraft with one of the
All the aircraft headed for a place called Tugela Ferry in the Natal hinterland. On reaching Tugela Ferry, the idea was to descend quickly to ground level and then fly down the Tugela River valley at low level, turn 90 degrees to starboard (right) upon reaching Tugela Mouth on the Indian Ocean coast, and proceed, still at low level, along the North Coast of Natal to a landing at AFB Durban.
The
The 20-metre-high rock stands at the northern entrance to a small inlet called Thompson’s Bay. I knew the place well, having spent many hours fruitlessly fishing from its heights. Thompson’s Bay was also where a significant number of local beauties spent time sunbathing, occasionally topless, in relative seclusion from prying eyes. Thus was the groundwork laid for a close aerial inspection of the beach at Thompson’s Bay (and any of its attractive occupants) as we flew by. It was, after all, directly on our route to AFB Durban.
Even though the Harvard is not the fastest aircraft on earth, it still gets along at quite a fair clip, and we rapidly approached Thompson’s Bay, passing the Salt Rock and Shaka’s Rock hotels. A few seconds later, Shaka’s Rock was abeam on the starboard side. So mesmerised were we with spotting gorgeous tanners on the beach that it was only at the very last second that we saw the kite-fisherman standing atop Shaka’s Rock. I recall clearly that his mouth was agape at an almost impossible angle and his posture remarkably aggressive.
‘What’s that idiot so upset about?’ I muttered under my breath a split second before I observed, in what seemed like slow motion, how his large rod and reel were torn from his hand and catapulted into the air between him and our airborne chariot.
‘I think that oke just lost his tackle!’ said the
Realising that we might just be in a bit of trouble, we headed for Durban as fast as the Harvard could carry us.
Ten minutes later we landed on Runway 23 at Louis Botha International Airport (now no longer operational), from where we would taxi to AFB Durban. Louis Botha had an area on a taxiway near the southern end of Runway 23 where an aircraft the size of a Harvard was invisible to anyone in the civilian control tower or anywhere on AFB Durban.
A good