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One of the less pleasant things any pilot has to do is take an aircraft on its final flight. I had to do this several times during my last few months on Victor Tankers at Marham as the Mk 1 and Mk 1a aircraft reached the end of their service life. However, the most interesting delivery flight was on 29 March 1976 when I took XA939 (belonging to No 55 Squadron) to RAF Catterick in North Yorkshire where it was to be used for fire practices by the RAF Fire Training School.
Catterick was no longer an active airfield but it had a disused runway only 3,300 feet long. There was an avenue of tall trees at the easterly end and the main A1 dual carriageway at the westerly end. The A1 southbound carriageway was only about 20 yards from the start/end of the runway with just a low wooden fence and a narrow taxi-
At the time I was the CO of the Victor Standardisation Unit based at RAF Marham. Together with my two navigators and air electronics officer, the unit was responsible for the operating standards of all Victor Mk 1 aircrew so it was, I suppose, inevitable that I should be tasked with delivering the aircraft onto this very short runway. Although the aircraft was going to be used for fire-
It was left to me to work out my own landing technique but, naturally, I took advice from other senior Victor captains. Our Group HQ laid down only three rules: the landing was to be made from east to west because an approach over the A1 would have caused major trouble had I undershot and landed on the road; there had to be a minimum of 15 knots headwind component along the runway; and there had to be a maximum crew of four: captain, co-
The Station Commander, Group Captain David Parry-
The arrival overhead was uneventful and I carried out my first visual approach using the standard technique. It was then that I noticed the avenue of trees at the touch down end was likely to impede my final approach if I wanted to touch down on the very first few feet of the runway – and I did! I decided that I would have to ‘throw’ the aircraft onto the ground by making it fall out of the sky as the wheels passed over the trees. On the overshoot from that first approach, I noticed that all traffic on the A1 had already been halted and considerable queues were forming north and southbound. I told the ground controller that I would not be landing for about 15 minutes but he replied that a senior traffic policeman had decided to halt the traffic because many vehicles, having somehow heard about the forthcoming landing, were starting to park illegally along the carriageways while other vehicles were slowing down to see what was going on. The senior policeman insisted that if he did not halt all traffic there was likely to be an accident.
I did two more circuits with full flap extended all the way around to burn off the excess fuel as quickly as I could and then made the final, final approach. I set myself up for a normal approach path until I was lined up with the runway. When I committed myself to the landing I put the aircraft into an exaggerated nose up attitude, thereby creating maximum drag, much higher than for a standard approach. This technique required a high power setting – about 83% on all four engines instead of the 70% that would have been used for a more orthodox approach. The disadvantage of this technique was that had I been forced to go around and had the flaps failed to retract, there would have been little spare engine thrust to take us back into the air. It was a make or break technique.
Just short of the avenue of trees at a very low speed of about 115kts, 25 kts lower than recommended for that weight, I ordered the co-
We then had to turn about and back-
I decided to pump what little fuel we had remaining as far forward of the C of G as possible even though there was a risk that the fuel pumps might be uncovered when we started up the slope. There was only one thing to do: take a run at it! I applied full brakes, increased power to about 90% and then, when the engines had stabilised, released the brakes. The faithful Victor surged forward like a sprinter off the starting blocks. As we moved forward up the slope the nose of the aircraft reared up and all sight of the ground disappeared from my windscreen. For a second I thought the nose-