For release November 1, 2005UTSI
STUDENT RECALLS STRUGGLE TO KEEP WAYWARD AIRPLANE ALOFT
“You had to be there.” Maj. Nathan Neblett, a
Marine test pilot, uses these five words to sum up a 27-second
experience with a gone-wild KC-130 tanker aircraft that neither
he nor his 10 fellow flyers will ever forget.
The University of Tennessee Space Institute Aviation Systems
student was cited for bringing in the wayward plane that twice
flipped upside down after 200-pound rafts, stored under a wing,
somehow escaped and one snagged on the horizontal stabilizer of
the plane’s tail.
While defending his master’s thesis at UTSI, Neblett confirmed
that all 11 passengers on board thought they would meet their
death in the West Virginia mountains last April 12. Restrained
from discussing details of the episode, he stood by quotes
attributed to him in two stories written by James Darcy, public
affairs officer with the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft
Division (NAWCAD).
Based on Darcy’s account, this is what happened: The crew from
Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 20 (VX-20) left the Naval Air
Station at Patuxent River, Md., bound for Twentynine Palms,
Calif., where a series of high-temperature tests on the new
Electronic Propeller Control System (EPCS) was scheduled. At
24,000 feet, everyone had unbuckled except Neblett and co-pilot
Dan Sanders.
Suddenly the aircraft was “rolling through a death spiral toward
the mountains of West Virginia,” Darcy wrote. Without any
attitudinal references, Neblett was fighting to bring the plane
under control while Sanders was struggling to keep hands off the
controls. Other crew members were being tossed here and there,
some bloodied by flying projectiles, trying to grab some anchor.
None of them knew why the plane had gone crazy. They could not
see that the inflatable life rafts stored in the left wing had
somehow escaped and one had become what Darcy called a “massive
asymmetric drag chute.”
The aircraft lost nearly 9,000 feet of altitude in the 27
seconds as Neblett tried in vain to determine which way was up;
his Attitude Direction Indicator was useless. Twice the plane
flipped upside down. Neblett recalled that Wray Emrich, flight
engineer, was “bouncing off the ceiling” as the plane headed
downward.
Cans of hydraulic fluid shot through the plane “like
cannonballs,” Darcy said. Three months afterwards, Sandy
Hartkemeyer, loadmaster, was quoted as saying she still had
indentations on her body. She and the others were “pinballs,”
the pilot said, “flying here and there in an 80 by 10 by
nine-foot space” in the rear of the plane. Neblett remembered
that the only thing that didn’t move “was our instrument panel.”
These were not amateurs. The crew had accumulated more than
34,000 hours of flight time and Neblett had been a test pilot
with VX-20 for more than two years. He had 1,200 hours at the
control of C-130’s.
Based on later data analysis, Neblett was quoted as saying that
11 seconds into the nightmare, “we were 45 degrees nose down,
with 350 knots forward air speed.” The maximum safe speed for
this plane at that altitude is 315 knots.
Darcy quoted the co-pilot that the raft “sawed through the
aluminum until it hit a stainless steel duct” in the tail of the
plane, creating a huge amount of drag and interfering with the
elevator, which controls the aircraft’s pitch.
Neblett had immediately disengaged the autopilot and relying on
his test pilot experience, was wrestling to arrest the spin.
Co-pilot Sanders – with 4,600 hours as a Marine Corps C-130
Hercules pilot before retiring a year ago as a major -- had
pulled the throttles back to idle. He was battling to avoid
interfering with the pilot.
The airflow demolished most of the snagged raft. Neblett worked
with Sanders, whose Attitude Direction Indicator was
functioning, and got the wings level. Pulling back on the yoke,
he coaxed the plane out of its dive. The altimeter read 15,000
feet. The plane’s maximum rate of descent had reached 19,000
feet per minute.
Neblett radioed authorities at Tri-State Airport in Huntington,
W. Va., advising that he had wounded aboard and was making an
emergency landing. Three crew members were hospitalized after
the smooth touch-down.
Rear Admiral Jeff Wieringa, NAWCAD Commander, pinned the Air
Medal on Maj. Neblett for saving the lives of the passengers and
crew. The citation noted that Neblett’s “aeronautical instinct,
aggressiveness, and level head led to the remarkable recovery of
a non-aerobatic aircraft from uncontrolled flight while
sustaining absolutely minimum damage.” His “superb airmanship,
decisive decision-making, perseverance, and loyal devotion to
duty in the face of hazardous flying conditions reflected great
credit upon himself and upheld the highest traditions of the
Marine Corps and the United States Naval Service,” the citation
concluded.
About that EPCS they were going to test? Sanders credited it
with helping the engines to hold during the extreme challenge of
the run-away flight.
Neblett, a native Texan, and a fellow test pilot, Navy Lt.
Commander John Rosseau of Maryland, were at UTSI in late
October, defending theses for
master’s degrees in Aviations Systems. Joining their major
professor, Dr. Ralph Kimberlin, on the committee was Dr. George
W. Masters, adjunct professor for Aviation Systems, and a former
test pilot instructor at Patuxent.

Marine Maj. Nathan Neblett, left, and Navy
Lt. Commander John Rosseau, right, Aviation Systems
students, stand with their major professor Dr. Ralph
Kimberlin, and Dr. George Masters, a former test pilot
instructor at Patuxent River and member of the theses
committee.
-- UTSI Photo by Mike Leigh
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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