Lost To Weather
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Interviewer: There were, you mentioned the
problems of navigation.
There were probably a lot of
air craft that were lost.
Just flew into the ocean.
Well, the weather was horrendous.
See, tropical weather is very violent
because ofvery strong thermals and they ...
I'm gonna eat up these 15 minutes if we talk ...
Interviewer: No that's fine.
No, we've got lots of time.
Well, the thermals go up so fast.
I think clouds build up to something around
40,000 feet, just over thousand, 40,000 feet.
Down there, they go up to over 60,000 feet.
And inside of some of those big thunder heads,
you have winds up to three hundred
miles an hour. And the freezing level is
somewhere inside the thunder cloud.
So you've got rain here and ice up here and
this flow of air is circling at this high speed.
Well, it freezes, comes down here,
picks up some more water, goes up there and
freezes some more and comes down.
So you build up big and bigger pellets
till they get to be four or five inches in
diameter travelling at about three hundred
miles an hour in this thing.
Now if you fly in there with an aircraft,
you know, if so much as a wheel comes
out of it, that's about all you'll see.
It absolutely pulverizes the thing.
So, there were a number of aircraft lost
to weather. More lost to weather and largely,
I think, to those cumulonimbus clouds as
I just described, then were lost to enemy fire.
I think that's an acknowledged fact
from that theatre. Now, today's aircraft
have radar that you can see them
and they can fly around it.
And if you watch the weather radar,
you see dense parts. They're red and so on.
Well, there was none of that.
It was just visual and so if you're flying
at night, now the thermals cooled
down a bit at night. But if you catch them
at the end of the day when it's just dark,
there's still a huge amount of
turbulence going on. And you can have
the aircraft pointed up like that with
full throttle on and be losing height at the
rate of two or three thousand feet
a minute, and coming down.
And another time, you have it pointed down
like that and you're going up two or
three thousand feet a minute.
You're trying to dive and your
elevation's winding up. It's very fierce
weather and if you're in a place you
don't have room to make those
manoeuvres, you hit the ground.
Description
Mr. Sharpe describes the dangers of flying in tropical weather conditions.
Charles Richard “Dick” Sharpe
Charles Richard Sharpe was born in St. Catharines, Ontario on February 11, 1925. His father worked for the Canada Customs Service, getting pensions for wounded Veterans. A Veteran of World War One, Mr. Sharpe’s father told him many stories about the war.
Mr. Sharpe joined the RCAF on the morning of his 18th birthday and became a pilot. He flew 23 missions for the RCAF and rose to the rank of Flight Lieutenant. After the war, Mr. Sharpe became a very successful businessman, serving for many years as CEO of Sears Canada. Among his many awards and recognitions, in 1998, he became a member of the Order of Canada.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 2:24
- Person Interviewed:
- Charles Richard “Dick” Sharpe
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Southeast Asia
- Battle/Campaign:
- Burma
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 159 Squadron
- Rank:
- Lieutenant
- Occupation:
- Pilot
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