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This Did Not Happen

"We had emerged from the storms. I could see the stars, the sweet, welcoming stars!" A. Richard Allen
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • A flight crew encountered severe in-flight turbulence and pitot tube icing, leading to critical instrument failure, autopilot disconnection, and an uncommanded stall.
  • The narrator's initial reaction, pitching up due to misleading airspeed indications, worsened the stall, causing a rapid descent and confusion among the pilots.
  • An exceptionally experienced senior captain, "Old Dubois," intervened, intuitively understood the underlying aerodynamic problem despite the confusing instruments, and successfully recovered the aircraft by pushing the nose down to regain airflow.
  • The incident highlights the critical value of seasoned pilot judgment, intuition, and fundamental flying skills in navigating complex, unforeseen aviation emergencies, a quality the narrator believes is increasingly rare.
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Jean-Claude was in the left seat. He was senior to me, but I was flying. We were near the equator, where Mermoz and Guillaumet had once flown — but they, poor fellows, had not been at 35,000 feet! We entered the clouds at what looked like a soft spot in a squall line. At first it wasn’t bad, but then the turbulence came, and with it lightning that never stopped, as if ogres with lanterns were laughing around us.

Peter Garrison

Peter Garrison taught himself to use a slide rule and tin snips, built an airplane in his backyard, and flew it to Japan. He began contributing to FLYING in 1968, and he continues to share his columns, ""Technicalities"" and ""Aftermath,"" with FLYING readers.

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