Clifford Bossie wrote:
The Inspector wrote:
Clifford,
Thanks for dispelling yet another well propagated aviation myth, always in favor of using a sifter to shake out bad info.
I was lucky in that about six months ago I went back over my notes to refresh the incident in my mind. It was a terrible tragedy and to me a learning experience. Four families lost loved ones that day. Aviation can be very unforgiving at times.
The whole deal was a royal mess. The investigation was at Holloman. They concluded pilot error. Creech bounced the report back to the investigative team. Al King had taped the entire thing from the Com Trailer at Indian Springs. His tape suddenly disappeared and to my knowledge is still missing. The "revised" report came up with a bungee failure in Lowrey's stabilator.
Nobody bought it. They STILL don't buy it! Chris Patterakis nailed it perfectly. It was a line abreast loop. The usual peripherals are missing in the line abreast loop for the two wings and slot. Add to this they were descending coming off the high gate float into the valley. This was the worst possible scenario for the wings and slot and there was no "go exploded call" or back up exploded call from the wing.
Lead's plane hit last. This was highly indicative and relevant.
To this day, it is widely felt in the team community that Lowery simply flew the front side of the maneuver coming off his entry with either an AGL initiation problem, too high a g line on the pull or a combination of the two, arriving at his high gate apex too low AGL , too fast, or both. You blow a high gate like that and once committed to the downline in a T38 past 60 degrees and you're history.
It is widely felt that had the maneuver been a Diamond Loop instead of Line Abreast, the slot would have picked up the error as a visual cue and called for the team to "go exploded". Contrary to popular belief, as well as maintaining position in a show diamond, both wings and especially the slot are capable of peripheral visual cue acquisition during certain phases of maneuvering formation flight as experience is gained through practice. This of course didn't happen.
As is the case in all accidents like this one, the cause was most likely a chain of error and contributing circumstance.
Dudley Henriques