Flying Blind
By
Edward O. Dayley (RET MAJ/USA)
As told to Beth Dayley
As an operations officer in
the Americal Division, and one of the few instructor pilots, I often would give
check-rides or evaluation flights during my second tour of duty in the Vietnam
War. I was assigned to Chu Lai; the
mountains rise straight up above the smooth, serene beach. The terrain is thick with vegetation hiding
all kinds of animal life.
Early each morning we’d all
meet together in the operations center to receive our missions and be briefed
about their specifics. One memorable
morning in March 1971, I plotted out my flight plan for the check-ride and
inspected my helicopter. I was
frustrated when I discovered that the skids on my aircraft weren't right. It was a minor problem, but because running
landings were required on check-rides, I needed good skids. A nearby pilot heard my complaint and offered
to switch aircraft with me. He was
dropping troops into a site high in the mountains. It was a dangerous mission because of the
locale and terrain; however, he wouldn't be doing any running landings, so the
bad skids wouldn't be a problem for him.
The check ride was routine
and smooth and as the pilot flew, my thoughts slipped back to the past and how
close I almost came to not being a helicopter pilot at all. I’d grown up in a small town in Southern
Idaho with an alcoholic dad and a working Mom.
I had learned to work hard, and had to earn everything thing I’d
received in life, so compared to my teenage years, flight school had been a
snap. But towards the middle of the
nine-month course, we got into instruments and I hit a mental cement wall.
A lot of flying is trusting
your instincts, "flying by the seat of your pants," and I excelled at
that. Instruments meant "flying
blind" which was just the opposite.
I was put in a flight simulator which blacked out all outer
sensations. Then I had to learn to trust
not what I felt or thought, but what
the lighted panel told me. Time after
time, I messed up because I felt I was flying straight and level, yet the
instruments showed I was in a tight descending turn! I fought and fought against the necessity to
trust something other than my own instincts.
Finally, when I had become
resigned to the fact that I would probably fail the course and end up in
Vietnam as a foot soldier, I stopped caring what happened and loosened up
enough to overcome my problem. I started
trusting the instruments more than my own gut feeling and I passed the course
and became a pilot.
Now here I was in Vietnam
flying a predictable, boring check-ride on a clear, warm day. Just then there was a loud explosion in the
back of the helicopter and the aircraft lurched to the right. I wrenched the controls from the other pilot
and wrestled against the aircraft’s tendency to roll over. Chaotic thoughts flashed through my mind.
Simultaneously I was assessing the situation. Had we been hit by mortar? Had we had a mid-air collision with another
aircraft?
Normally in any emergency
when there is a loss of power, the pilot puts the aircraft into auto-rotation
and cuts the throttle. This common
procedure is repeatedly drummed into pilots until we do it without
thinking. My actions that day over the
South China Sea were neither normal nor natural, and I can't explain them
logically. I felt as though I was
"letting go" and trusting something higher than myself or my
instruments. I was flying blind.
I did not cut the engine as
a pilot's reflexes would dictate. I did
not know what was wrong. I wasn't even sure
I had rotor blades above me that were turning.
All I knew is that I didn't want to go down over the sea or we'd
drown. Helicopter pilots who hit the sea
go down with their aircraft into a watery grave. As the rotors miraculously continued to
turn, I realized our only chance was to reach the beach. With the engine screeching like a banshee
and the controls jerking like a mad bull, we somehow landed with one skid on
the beach and one in the water. As the
skid touched ground, the rotor blades seized up and stopped with a snap.
Safely on the shore, we
examined the aircraft and discovered that our transmission had disintegrated
during the flight. Why we survived I still don't understand. One thing is definite—if I had followed the
normal emergency procedures drummed into me during flight school, as soon as I
cut the engine, the transmission would have locked up and the rotors would have
immediately ceased. We would have
dropped like a stone from the sky. I think, too, of the men that were originally
scheduled to be aboard that aircraft I flew that day. What would have happened
to them on their rocky mountain terrain if they had been flying that aircraft
when the transmission ceased?
Trusting
in something other than one's experience or training is very rare in this
world. Why did I ignore the
normal reflexes and procedures and do the only thing that could have saved our
lives that day? Was I a tool in the
hands of the Lord that spring day half way around the world? Was it coincidence that we switched aircraft
that morning? Did some of those men on
the other flight still have missions to fulfill?
I believe that the Lord was with me that day; I know that
he guided me and the other pilots to safety. If we trust the Lord, he will lead
us and guide us.
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