At
approximately noon February 21, 1944, from 25,000
feet above Blanche Bay, New Britain Island, Marine
Corps Captain Winfred O. "Pappy" Reid
is falling into the maws of “Fortress Rabaul”,
Imperial Japan’s Southwest Pacific military
headquarters. Unlike Icarus of Greek mythology,
his F4U-1A Corsair still has its wings. However,
Pappy's 2,000 horsepower “Double Wasp”
engine has suddenly vibrated, backfired, and become
powerless to keep him flying high over his enemy’s
domain.
Even
though its windmill sized propellers continued
to spin because of the plane’s forward momentum,
the iconic fighter plane has lost its 250 knot
cruising speed and begins to stall with an immediate
drop of its left wing putting the plane into a
potential “spiral of death”.
Instinctively
easing forward on the control stick with his yellow,
capeskin gloved right hand as his right “boondockers”
clad foot simultaneously eased the right vertical
stabilizer pedal forward, the veteran fighter
pilot quickly took back control of his craft and
continued “flying” his iconic fighter.
After
years of training for every possible flight emergency,
the skilled aviator’s reaction was automatic
but in the back of his mind he was replaying the
sage advice his Pensacola flight instructor gave
him some years before to: “never run out
of altitude and brains at the same time”.
Capt.
Reid’s fighter, now a defenseless six-ton
glider with a 13:1 glide ratio was in peril of
becoming a mere oil slick in the waters below
because Reid had about one minute to methodically
and calmly restart his powerful Pratt & Whitney
R-2800-8 power plant. Surmising his problem to
be either a fuel starved 2800 cubic centimeters
engine or a failure of the Magnetos that “sparked”
the eighteen cylinders of the single radial engine
that made his Corsair the fastest plane in the
air.
|
Pratt
& Whitney R-2800-8 "Double Wasp"
|
Giving
a quick glance forward and to the lower right
of his Main Instrument Panel, Pappy saw the Fuel
Pressure gauge indicating 18 Lbs.; just as it
should be. It was then he realized must it must
have been the Magnetos that had failed on his
monstrous engine.
This
wasn’t the first time a “Double Wasp”
had suddenly cut out on a Corsair in the Solomon
Islands. It would happen at high altitude and
a pilot could usually restart the engine by diving
to a lower altitude, that is, if Japanese Zeros
didn’t take advantage of the pilot’s
misfortune on his way down.
The
Pratt & Whitney factory “Reps”
assigned to the Marines in the Pacific Theatre
had decided that insufficient oxygen at high altitudes
prohibited the Magnetos to adequately “fire”
the fuel-air mixture in the cylinders. There were
also the challenges of maintaining aircraft and
their engines on equatorial isles in a tropical
war zone. Magneto Pressurizing Tubes had been
developed to solve the problem but the “Flying
Leathernecks” were at the tip of a very
long spear, half a world away from the other end
of it at “P&W’s” Connecticut
manufacturing plants.
Already
one thousand feet of free-fall have passed and
the man and machine are still powerless and likely
a ‘sitting duck’ to the Japanese predators
that were possibly already diving towards him
like Hawks from out of the blinding mid-day sun.
Moments
before, Pappy had been on a forty-fighter escort
mission for fifteen Army Air Corps B-24 bombers.
His had been one of twelve Corsairs from his squadron,
VMF-222, flying medium cover just above the bombers.
Air Corps P-38 Lightings were flying high cover
at 35,000 feet; and Royal New Zealand Air Force
P-40 Warhawks at 20,000 feet had been flying the
low cover for the 13th Air Force Liberator bombers.
But oblivious of the plight of the lone F4U, the
armada continued droning on towards Rabaul’s
Lakunai Aerodrome.
Reid
wonders if any of his buddies saw him fall out
of formation; he couldn’t broadcast his
problem as there was still radio silence in effect.
It was not uncommon for planes to vanish on these
missions and later, after many days of volunteer
airborne searches by their squadron mates, the
hapless pilots had to be officially declared as
Missing in Action.
|
F4U-1
Cockpit, Left Panel
|
Despite
their “swashbuckling” reputation,
Marine pilots were disciplined and their orders
were not to leave their slow, vulnerable herds
of bombers unprotected en route to a target. The
P-38s usually got the “choice” assignment
of the high cover because the Lightening had a
higher service ceiling than the F4U (44,000’
vs. 36,900’) giving the P-38 the highest
“perch” in the Southwest Pacific from
which to pounce on the enemy Tony fighters flying
at 38,100’ and Zero’s 33,000’
maximum altitudes.
Once
the bombers were empty of their tons of high explosives,
they could scurry back to their fields in tight
formations and able to defend themselves adequately
with their own .50 caliber machine guns. The fighters
were usually free to “freelance” on
their return with their own style of mayhem using
their 6, .50 caliber guns against enemy air and
ground ‘targets of opportunity’.
Working
quickly through the plane’s shut-down procedure
to clear the engine of the unburned fuel still
flowing into the 18 cylinder engine, the captain
reached a few inches forward with his left hand
to the Ignition Switch at the front of the Left
Distribution Consul to turn the Magneto selector
knob clockwise from the BOTH ON to the BOTH OFF
position. Switching hands on the control stick
to begin the fuel evaporation process, Pappy moved
the Cooling Flaps levers on the Right Hand Consul
to the OPEN position and then the Alternate Air
Control to the IN position.
Trading
hands again, the Arkansas pilot reached for the
Engine Control Unit quadrant beside him and pinching
the black Bakelite knob of the Prop Control lever
with his left thumb and forefinger he pulled it
back and down to put it into Low Pitch, High RPM
mode.