Mid-Air Engine Failure
Heroes Remember
Transcript
In Tain I had an engine failure, in a Tiffy. There was something
wrong with the aircraft, and they decided to put three half hour
tests on it and then they would check the engine, you see.
So I did one half hour test and then went down, they checked it
and everything was fine. So I went of to do the other one and for
some reason or other I just took off full throttle and climbed
to two thousand feet. And there was a bang and I didn't have
engine. So I just turned downwind and called the tower and told
them what happened and then I was making, turning, and making the
downwind leg this way, crosswind leg and then go into the runway
this way. And it was going just fine, everything was perfect.
And I got crossways, crosswind, I thought, well I'll drop the
wheels. When I dropped the wheels and they got big pants on the
wheels and as soon as I put that down the wind caught the pants
and I was undershooting the fields. So I lifted the undercarriage
and we, the undercarriage came up, to my surprise, and we got,
I couldn't make the runway but I came over the fence, across the
runway, hit a little hill, it came, went up on it's nose and then
came back like that. I had engine but it was just idling.
I couldn't give it any power at all. And what had happened there
was a little bolt and it was turned, turned someway. And it was
machined in here and it had been machined an eighth of an inch
too much on the butterfly valve on the carburetor and it snapped
and the butterfly valve closed so I couldn't get any fuel into
the engine. But I did have engine and the result was I had
hydraulics so the wheels were able to come up. I was lucky!
(Very lucky.) But I hit the four, the gun sites right
in front of me and I bashed my head on it but, didn't hurt.
Interviewer: Were you then convalescing for any period?
Nope, oh I went over to the MIR, Medical Inspection Room,
the doc had a look at me then the CEO sent me up on another
airplane. Wasn't long after that that I got posted.
Description
Mr. Sproule remembers experiencing a mid-air engine failure in a Typhoon during a test flight.
Frederick Howard Sproule
Mr. Sproule was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, on September 22, 1918. He first served as a cadet with the Seaforth Highlanders before joining the regular service. He switched to the air force as soon as he was able, first being accepted as a gunner, and then into pilot training. After serving as a flight instructor on Harvards, Mr Sproule was shipped to Great Britain where he trained on a Hurricane. Eventually, he piloted a Typhoon as a bomber in the Burma Campaign, helping to drive back the Japanese. His tour finished as the Japanese were completely driven out of Burma.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:54
- Person Interviewed:
- Frederick Howard Sproule
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Scotland
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 186 Squadron
- Rank:
- Supernumerary Flight Lieutenant
- Occupation:
- Pilot
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