For release September 12, 2005
PROFESSOR KIMBERLIN RETIRES AT UTSI
Dr. Ralph D. Kimberlin of Tullahoma, Alumni
Distinguished Service Professor and Chair of the Aviation
Systems Graduate Program at The University of Tennessee Space
Institute, has retired.
A test pilot and author of “Flight Testing of Fixed-Wing
Aircraft,” Kimberlin led numerous short courses relating to
aviation during his 26 years and saw nine graduates of the
Aviation Systems program chosen as U.S. astronauts.
As a major in the Air Force Reserves, Kimberlin earned a
master’s in Aerospace Engineering at UTSI in June 1975. He
joined the Institute’s faculty in April 1979 and later earned a
doctorate in Aerospace Engineering from the Technical University
of Aachen. He retired Aug. 31 – the day after attending a
retirement party held for him at the Institute.
“We thank Dr. Kimberlin for his many contributions to our
Aviation Systems program and wish him the very best in his
retirement years,” said Dr. John E. Caruthers, associate vice
president and chief operating officer.
Having baled out of airplanes twice – including once when his
parachute opened just as his shoes were touching corn tassels –
Kimberlin said he wrote his flight-testing book to be used as a
text and also as a “reference for folks in the aviation industry
so they won’t have to re-invent the wheel.”
Published in 2004 as part of the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc.’s AIAA Education Series, the
book was Kimberlin’s attempt to “capture some of the things I’ve
learned in the last 30 years about flight testing.”
Kimberlin graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy with a
bachelor’s degree in engineering and was commissioned as an Air
Force officer. While serving in Vietnam, he was one of three
officers responsible for the development and combat evaluation
of the AC-47 side-firing gun ship. He was a test pilot and
flight test engineer for Piper, Rockwell International, and
Beech Aircraft companies for 10 years before joining the Space
Institute. For three years he was a design engineer with Cessna
Aircraft Company, but flying was always his passion. It almost
cost him his life.
As a seven-year-old growing up in Missouri, a neighbor’s pilot
friend landed one day in a field and took Ralph and his father
for a ride, and “the bug bit me and bit me hard,” Kimberlin
remembers. “That’s what I’ve wanted to do since that moment.”
He was 31 when in 1971 he jumped out of his first airplane. He
remembers the second time, in 1976, as a “near-death
experience.”
“It was a dive test, and the tail came off the airplane at dive
speed,” he told an interviewer in 1998. “The plane just started
tumbling down, and I had a near-death experience.” G-forces were
so great he was unable to function, he recalled, and he thought
he would die.
Though he had his parachute on, he had trouble getting out of
his harness, but finally got it unbuckled and jumped, and about
300 feet above ground, yanked the pull-cord with both hands.
“It was a cornfield I was coming down in,” he told the
interviewer, “and I remember my feet touching the top of the
corn stalks when my parachute fully opened. But it was a soft
touch down…All I can say is that the Good Lord was with me.”
Kimberlin is proud of UTSI’s 10,000-square-foot Flight Research
Center at the Tullahoma Airport, which includes classroom,
hangar, and about a dozen airplanes – some called “flying
classrooms.” He remembers that “when I came here, we had two
airplanes parked on the airstrip that were being maintained out
of a pickup.”
Son of a school teacher, Kimberlin discovered that in addition
to flying, he found another passion; he discovered that he also
“loves to teach.”
Now he expects he and his wife Jean will spend more time in
their vacation house in Winter Haven, Fla. He may fish some, but
he probably won’t be that far from his airplane.

Dr. Ralph Kimberlin
samples treats at his UTSI retirement party.

Dr. Atul Sheth, left, congratulates Dr. Ralph
Kimberlin at a party marking his retirement from
UTSI after 26 years.
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
|