THE WORLD S OLDEST FIGHTER PILOT HANGS UP HIS FLYING BOOTS written by Max Blenkin August 31, 2018

Similar documents
V SEP Page 1 of 8 EMPLOYMENT FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS MILSKIL THE COMPANY. Who is Milskil?

RETIREMENT OF THE DHC-4 CARIBOU.

Wing Commander J.A. (Nick) Osborne Commanding Officer 76 Squadron

World record heights to fatal plane crash, the stories of Ryan Campbell and Gary Turnbull

Iace Report Day 1. Day 2

December Welcome. The Month In Review

Virtual Royal Air Force 208 (R) Sqn Syllabus

SITUATIONAL AWARENESS

The Duxford Air Show.

BIGGIN HILL. Historic Aircraft Centre RNZAF Ohakea New Zealand

FEBRUARY WEBELOS TO SCOUT WITH NO TROOP. Music Full then under

Written by Administrator Tuesday, 03 August :31 - Last Updated Wednesday, 05 January :26

RESPONSE TO NPRM 1007OS MANDATORY FLIGHT SIMULATOR TRAINING

GIVE YOUR ENGINEERING CAREER A FLYING START WITH A FAS APPRENTICESHIP

Avalon Air Show Special Edition

Helicopter Training Information Brochure

advice Sound Also in this issue How are general aviation airports winning the battle against aircraft noise?

BEECHCRAFT SYDNEY KING AIR (02) A TRUE LEADER IN REGIONAL AIR CHARTER AOC # CASA.TAAOC.0890 AIR LINK PTY LTD

AVIATION & TRANSPORT AVIATION & TRANSPORT AVIATION TRANSPORT

HERB S NEWS579 JANUARY 13, 2017

[FILE] AIRCRAFT MECHANIC STUDY OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS

TO RV OR NOT TO RV...

PANEL 2: GATEWAY/PATHWAY PROGRAMS FOR FLIGHT. Reporters: Bill Hutto, Auburn University Jorge Calaf, Inter American University of Puerto Rico

Carfax Commercial Constructions is an award-winning, quality-accredited

Turkish Training Revolution

61 Pilot s Reunion. Vol 59 Page 13

Virtual Royal Air Force 45 (R) Sqn Syllabus

CALL INCREDIBLE ADVENTURES TO SCHEDULE YOUR TRAINING TODAY! CALL: 1 (800) / +1 (941)

Top down vs bottom up

UAS Training : Learning from the Military

Check out the back page for our KID S PASSPORT! SATURDAY 19 AUGUST, 2017

MHRCS Pilot Briefing. Mid-Hudson Radio Control Society. Pilot Briefing

The ICAO NGAP Global NGAP OUTREACH NGAP OUTREACH

The Damiani Family by Son Sam Damiani Italian Immigrants Olympia May 3, 1966

IATA Training and Qualification Initiative (ITQI) - A Total System Approach to Training

600 Saddle River Road, Airmont, NY Fax: The Passion Continues MONDAY, JUNE 27 TH IS DAY

Campus Information Booklet

Heliflight UK Ltd TRIAL HELICOPTER LESSON

Jetstar Cadet Pilot Program

TRAIN TO MOSCOW HAL AMES

We design High Identified Flying Objects

The New Aggressors. Out at Nellis AFB, Nev., the 64th and 65th Aggressor Squadrons carry on a proud tradition. Photography by Rick Llinares

Section M. Airline Transport Pilot s Licence (Aeroplanes)

ROYAL CANADIAN AIR CADETS PROFICIENCY LEVEL ONE INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE SECTION 6 EO C IDENTIFY INTERNATIONAL AIRCRAFT PREPARATION

PROPRIETARY NINTH GRADE NINTH GRADE CURRICULUM BY UNIT

INTEGRATED PROFESSIONAL PILOT PROGRAM

Canada s National Airshow. Abbotsford, British Columbia

Don Boyles personal Account of record setting jump.

Air Transport Association of Canada

15-17 November 2018 Bankstown Airport

The dictionary says that happiness is the state of being happy! Some people seem to be really unfortunate but they are still happy.

JETSTAR CADET PILOT PROGRAM 2019

"THE KING AND I" written by. Joshua Lederman

TRANSPORT CANADA PROFESSIONAL AVIATION CURRENCY PROGRAM Effective: 1 April 2007

Number 13/ th June, 2016

Names under XH558 s Wing commemorative plaque to mark 10 th Anniversary of first post-restoration flight

Mercy Flight. Dear Pilot,

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT RUDOLF WEINDLER. Interview Date: January 15, Transcribed by Nancy Francis

Thales on the Civil Aerospace market

My dad encouraged me to find a job where I could get paid for doing something I love, Ethan said.

INTERNATIONAL STUDENT PROSPECTUS

For the purposes of this guidance material the following definitions are used:

Airbus A320 Training Courses

We have professional, FULL TIME instructors for all of your training needs:

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW

A short story by Leo Schoof, Kelmscott, Western Australia. The Sexton s Wife

A celebration of flight brings the past and the present together. Heritage Fligh. Photography by Erik Hildebrandt. AIR FORCE Magazine / February 2000

My home airport is typical of the Western US. Located in a valley near a mountain range. I can now

Boeing 737 Training Courses

A dedicated group, the Confederate Air Force brings aviation history to life.

ICON s Airplane Ownership Philosophy: Why is the Aircraft Purchase Agreement so Darn Complicated?

Donate Your Deposit to Win an Adventure!

C I T A T I O N C J 3 +

tigers), provided with any systems manuals (other than those that were purchased from Jetstar),with which to revise the computer based training and

AVI50415 Diploma of Aviation (Instrument Rating)

Graduate Profile, Aeronautical Engineering, University of Limerick, Ireland PAUL DEVANEY

Every Child Can Fly.

Maximise your Potential. Professional Training Programs for Commercial Pilots

Modern Aviation.

IASSF: A Simulation For F/A-18 Avionics Software Testing.

CENTRAL TEXAS COLLEGE AIR AGENCY No. DU8S099Q SYLLABUS FOR AIRP 2251 FLIGHT MULTI-ENGINE Semester Hours Credit: 2_

Proposed amendments to the Air Navigation (Essendon Airport) Regulations 2001

Born June 4th, 1922 to Charles Manning Jaquette and Aura Louise Smith

Aviation Engineer / Specialist postgraduate training course

Chapter 1 You re under arrest!

The Air Scoop. Fall Issue October 2014 Bergstrom's Student Accomplishments. Letter from the President. Oktoberfest Potluck Lunch

FLIGHT ONE AVIATION ABOUT US OUR BUSINESS


Table of Contents. Aviation Flight... 1 Aviation Flight Courses... 2 Aviation Flight Faculty... 4

QANTAS GROUP HALF YEAR FINANCIAL RESULTS 22 FEBRUARY 2018 ALAN JOYCE SPEECH

Cope Nor. Pacific Air Forces drilled in February with airmen from Japan and Australia in this two-week exercise.

Fly a Fighter Jet Over France /

READY TO TAKE MORE, FARTHER

READY TO TAKE MORE, FARTHER

INDUSTRY. Celebrating. Avidyne s

COMPANY INTRODUCTION

The sky s our limit. Alicia Cormican

Aviation School Program

Buyer s Guide to Effective Upset Prevention & Recovery Training

Helicopter Flight Training Information Brochure

Transcription:

THE WORLD S OLDEST FIGHTER PILOT HANGS UP HIS FLYING BOOTS written by Max Blenkin August 31, 2018 Frawls poses with a 76SQN Hawk before his final RAAF flight. (Mark Jessop) Squadron Leader Phil Frawley retired from the RAAF at the end of June, concluding a long flying career in which he s piloted everything from Mirages, Hornets and C-130s to Fokker DR1, P-40 Kittyhawk and Grumman Avenger warbirds. Six months more and he could have made a full half century in the RAAF and maybe 500 RAAF pilots trained. He s had to settle with 499. Right up to the last day, he was fully qualified to fly fast jets and at age 66 that made him the oldest serving fighter pilot in Australia and likely the world. As at August 1 last year the Guinness Book of World Records acknowledged Squadron Leader Phil Frawley, then 65, of Newcastle, NSW, Australia, as the world s oldest active fighter pilot. A year older, Frawley, who goes by the moniker Frawls, said he planned to try to update that record. Reflecting on fast jets and young pilots, he said of all the fighters he s flown, the standout was the MiG-21, the Soviet-designed supersonic fighter and interceptor which first flew in 1956 and which remains in service in mostly third world air forces around the world.

A total of 11,496 were made, most in the former USSR. When I was flying Mirages we were told they were hunks of junk and not really worthy of being an adversary, he told Australian Aviation. Once I learned to fly it, I soon found that it was actually in many ways superior to the Mirage. In the right hands we would have had a hard time defeating it magnificent jet. Because so many were made and subsequently sold off as former Soviet clients updated their air forces, a significant number of MiG-21s have found their way into private hands. There are more than 40 in the US, a couple in Australia, including one at Fighter World, Williamtown, which he used to fly. Frawley said spare parts are easy to obtain but it was not an easy jet to master. It s very very manly, that s for sure. Only my Mirage experience helped me through the process of training on it, he said. I was trained by the deputy chief of the Slovakian air force. The reliability and the robust nature of the aeroplane is just incredible. That seems to be the theme through Russian aeroplanes. Of all the pilots he s instructed, just one stood out as an absolute natural and

he was not an Aussie, but a Saudi Arabian. That was during a five-year contract to train Royal Saudi Air Force pilots on the Hawk lead-in fighter. He flew the aeroplane way better than I could. He was amazing. I have never seen anybody quite like that, he said. There are a lot of gifted people who come through onto fighters, naturally enough because they are selected that way. To be the instructor of a guy like this guy was absolutely amazing. Fifty to 60 per cent of the kids that I have trained in fighters have been well above average but still needing a lot of guidance. With this guy in Saudi Arabia, every training set that we did and every skill-set he was required to do, he was exemplary. He went onto F-15s. After returning from Saudi, he returned to the RAAF as a reservist with 76 Squadron at RAAF Williamtown, instructing on the Hawk. His thoughts on young Australian pilots? There has been a slight downturn in the standard because we are not getting as many recruits for pilot training, he said. Having said that the kids that come through are all over computers and things digital. They pick up the logic of the computers in the aeroplane very quickly. In that respect they are probably a bit more adept. But in terms of basic flying skills, some still encountered problems from time to time. The way the training regime is in the Air Force now, we put a lot of effort into making sure they come up to speed. If they need remedial training we give it to them he said. The Air Force invests a hell of a lot of money in these young people and to get them to a certain level in their training and then decide we don t want to continue with them any more is really nonsensical. It is not economical. If we can give them a remedial training package that gets them up to the right standard and sends them on their way it is fantastic. The RAAF has just graduated its first two female Hornet pilots, assisted along the way by Phil Frawley.

They were two different personalities but both very determined. As far as I am concerned having females on fighters is fine. There is no problem with it whatsoever, he said. I actually found that the girls had a better feel for the aeroplane. The guys tend to be very mechanical initially until they get a bit more experience. In my experience, the girls seem to be in tune with the airframe more so than the boys. It s hard to put a reason to that. Frawley joined the RAAF initially as an apprentice instrument fitter. (Mark Jessop) Frawley said he was very proud to have trained 499 Australian Defence Force pilots. I didn t click over to 500 which is unfortunate but that s alright, he said. To be part of their dreams and aspirations is so incredibly satisfying. It is just wonderful to know that you have helped them on their way. Like many youngsters growing up in the aftermath of World War 2, he developed an early passion for aviation. My stepfather was in the RAAF during World War 2 as an armourer. He was on a pilot course when the war ended and he was demobbed and didn t complete the pilot course, he said. I just caught the bug.

His stepfather and an uncle remained deeply interested in aviation and his first flights were aboard small civil light aircraft. He joined the RAAF initially as an apprentice instrument fitter, with two and a half years at Wagga and the same at RAAF Williamtown where he studied at night school to attain the qualifications necessary to enter pilot training. He began pilots course in 1974, learning to fly on the Winjeel. That was the first aeroplane I was serous about flying. It was the only aeroplane without an onboard computer with a mind of its own. There were times when you felt you were just a passenger, he said. He flew C-130 Hercules for five years, starting on A models and then the brand-new H models. From there I applied to go to fighters and I was lucky enough to complete my training on the Mirage, he said. As the Mirages were phased out he went onto F/A-18 Hornets. It was a lovely jet but going from Mirage to Hornet, second-generation to a fourth-generation aeroplane was a huge leap, he said. Its capabilities were incredible and the modifications they have done on it through the years make it a very formidable platform, that s for sure. Alas, he ll never get to fly the F-35, a true fifth-generation platform and a quantum leap for the RAAF as was the transition from Mirage to Hornet. He has though flown the simulator, which he said was amazing. I don t think my brain space has got enough left in it to cope with something like that. Naturally enough being a fighter pilot, I would love to have a go at it, but it s not going to happen, he said. The thing about the aeroplane is it s so secret. The press only gets snippets of information and a lot of it isn t indicative of what the aeroplane is capable of doing, he said. There is no releasability of the real information. Nobody knows the real story apart from the guys who are over there flying it who are suitably impressed. It is a very exciting time for the Air Force.

Flying the RAAF Museum s Fokker DR1 Triplane and then its CAC Sabre opened the door to Frawley s considerable warbirds flying experience. As a result of that people got to know me and I subsequently flew the the Fiat G59 Italian fighter it s like a Mustang the P-40 Kittyhawk, T-28 Trojan, TBM Avenger, L-39, he said. He also flew the MiG-15 as well as the MiG-21, the Polish Iskra and the Chinese Nanchang. Post-RAAF, he will continue to fly the Czech-built L-39 Albatros jet trainer, for which he s a Civil Aviation Safety Authority training authority. So if you ve ever fancied a ride in fast jet, you can do so in a L-39 with Frawls at the controls through Jetride, which operates out of Cessnock in the NSW Hunter Valley. Right now the RAAF is rolling out a new fitness regime across the Air Combat Group and 76 Squadron to build up core strength to deal with the bane of fighter pilots neck and back problems from flying high Gs with a heavy helmet while maintaining constant watch for hostiles. Taxiing out for his final RAAF mission. (Mark Jessop) Frawley said this was essential. I suffer really badly from back and neck problems. With the new helmets and a lot of weight on the top of your head and pulling Gs and stuff like that, it is a necessity, he said.

We encouraged it initially but it wasn t compulsory but now it s pretty much compulsory. It will avoid a lot of neck injuries. It s great that the Air Force is starting to recognise that these young people really need to have a high level of fitness to fly these jets. Frawley says his back and neck problems are getting worse and that was one reason he was getting out now. It is sad to a certain extent but I realise the time has come. Everything is overtaking me so it s time to quit, he said. With his final flight, he was given the traditional RAAF sendoff, kidnapped by fellow pilots, plonked in a chair then sprayed with champagne and coated with flour and eggs. Still this isn t the end of his flying. He will continue to do the adventure flights with Jetride. And he s crew chief for the Warby Motorsport bid to break the world water speed record, set by Ken Warby in 1978. That record, 511 km/h, has stood for the last 40 years. Warby senior has retired from further record attempts but is assisting his son David in the latest bid. No date has yet been set but it will be attempted where the last record was set, Blowering Dam in the Snowy Mountains. I just help with the maintainers of the boat. That keeps me busy and it s a wonderful thing to be involved with. I am really looking forward to him breaking the record, he said. We have had the boat up to 300km/h. Just refining the handling of the boat is what we are doing now and getting the balance right. It will be a while before the attempt is made. Right now we are going through all the testing and the team training and stuff like that.

Frawls with son Steven and wife Kerry. (Mark Jessop) Phil Frawley has been married to Kerry for 45 years and the couple have two sons and four grandchildren. Neither son chose a career in aviation one is in IT, the other a policeman. The youngest boy did a couple of lessons and he was very good. He had the aptitude but just not the drive or desire. I think over-exposure was the problem, he said. Certainly Frawley senior has done enough flying for the two of them! This feature article first appeared in the August 2018 issue of Australian Aviation.