REVELATIONS REGARDING
MAJOR CARL SPENCER CROSS
AND THE NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION XB-70.
AIR VEHICLE #2
62-207
Graham M Simons
author,
‘Valkyrie The North American XB70’
Pen & Sword
Aviation ISBN 184884546-4
Background.
In early 2015 an item appeared in
the Rosamond Skypark Association webpage on the Internet. The Rosamond Skypark
is a privately-owned and operated residential skypark located in Southern
California's Antelope Valley (AKA ‘Aerospace Valley’). Their FAA designator is
L00 (Lima-Zero-Zero) and their airport is open for public use.
One item was of particular
interest and was brought to the attention of members of the XB-70 Valkyrie
Facebook page, of which I am a member. The page in question was from the late
Gene Earl Burton and has a URL of http://www.skypark.org/aero_memories/Gene_Burton.html.
I found of great interest.
Burton, worked for North American Aviation for 26 years, including on the
XB-70. Quote: Routine flights were to be
conducted out Of Air Force Plant #42 at Palmdale, California, while more
dangerous or secret testing was to be done at nearby Edwards Air Force Base,
California… In late 1959, I was transferred to the desert area and promoted to
Flight Test Supervisor. We bought a home in Lancaster, California, the nicest
place to live in a area. [sic]
The relevant part of the Gene
Earl Burton transcipt regarding Major Carl Spencer Cross and the XB-70 accident
is as follows. ‘During a debriefing at
the EAFB hospital, Al explained that he had encapsulated and was set to eject
when he looked over to see that Cross was not properly preparing for ejection.
He was pushing on the panel trying to force his seat back into the capsule
which was the correct procedure in a B 58 which Cross had been flying prior to
his assignment to the XB 70A. Al said that he opened his capsule and was trying
to show Cross what to do when the ship went out of control. Al had no choice
but to eject. However, he did it so fast that he failed to got his right arm
back inside the capsule. As a result, his right elbow was injured during
ejection. We couldn't believe that Major Cross hadn't learned the ejection
process. We went to the seat ejection simulator where all XB 70A Pilots were
supposed to spend so many hours a week (I can't recall how many) practicing
seat ejection. According to the log book, Major Cross had initialed the
required practice time. However, the simulation crew told us that he never got
in the seat he just came,
initialed the log book, and left’.
This raises several points, but
please let me say from the outset, I am not doubting in the slightest that Gene
Burton was there and recalled the events in the manner in which he describes
them. However, from the historical
point of view the Rosamund Skypark web-page cannot be classed as ‘primary
source documentation’. As their webmaster states ; ‘I may have missed a few scan-and-convert errors but otherwise it is
presented exactly as received, including the personal introduction addressed to
his family’.
This statement clearly shows that
the original document was hard-copy typed, was then scanned into a computer and
then converted to a file that was suitable for use on a web-page. Therefore
what we are reading is almost certainly fourth generation from original author.
The timeline is something like this:
1. Gene Burton tells story/writes it down.
2. Maybe types it, maybe has it typed for him
3. Original typed document scanned into computer
4. Scanned document converted to text file and ‘corrected’ by Rosamund
webmaster.
5. Uploaded to web, the document we are reading.
From the webpage there are a
number of obvious and even more not-so-obvious errors and it is possible that
some or all of these were introduced at any stage during the timeline. Mr
Burton may have remembered things incorrectly, there were typed errors
introduced in the original hard copy, scanning errors were created when
scanned, auto-correct errors appeared when converted to text file, the
transcription was done by someone without technical knowledge – the
possibilities are almost endless.
Mr Burton states: ‘…We went to the seat ejection simulator
where all XB 70A Pilots were supposed to spend so many hours a week (I can't
recall how many) practicing seat ejection…’ To me, this statement has the
ring of unaltered believability about it in many ways, for it is written in
what I call ‘millitary-speak’ in that he says ‘seat ejection simulator’, where
civilians are more likely to say ‘ejection seat simulator’.
However, that said, the use of the word ‘simulator’ I do find
slightly puzzling, and when it is linked with the second part of Mr Burton’s
statement I think this could well reveal something that was previously
unrealized about the XB-70 – If this statement is correct, and remember, this
gentleman was there - pilots had to spend a fairly large amount of time – ‘…so many hours…’ practicing seat
ejection.
Previous to this, I was under the
impression that there was something that over here in the UK that given the
time period would be called a ‘procedures trainer’ – in this case, a working
dummy seat and capsule where a pilot could practice the procedures involved in
election – or in this case encapsulation and then ejection.
This started me thinking what
exactly was involved in the process, and was it of a sufficiently technical,
complex nature that it needed practicing over and over again on a regular
basis? I went to my copy of the XB-70 Interim Flight Manual, and straight away
it revealed that ejecting from the XB-70 was a far-from-simple process:
Section 3, part 22, dated 25 June
1965 reveals all.
Crew encapsulation came in three
forms, and was slightly different for AF62-001 and AF62-207. Before the Manual
went into any detail there was an introductory note to the section:
‘Ballistic encapsulation can be accomplished only once. However, manual
encapsulation can be accomplished as often as necessary before or after
ballistic encapsulation.
MANUAL ENCAPSULATION
1. Encapsulate Order (Pilot)
Move encapsulate caution light
switch to ON or use intercom to notify copilot to manually encapsulate. Watch
for crew encapsulated indicator light to come on when the copilot’s capsule is
closed. Receive copilot acknowledgement of the order.
If time and conditions permit:
a. Stow loose equipment.
b. Standby pitch trim arming
switch – Check ARMED.
The
standby pitch trim arming switch must be ARMED to ensure operation of the trim
switch on the emergency descent control grip in each capsule.
c. Inlets* Engage manual control.
Inlets (Automatic AICS) **. No action required.
Bypass door switches (Standby ACIS)** Both down
to OPEN as required to position shocks in the top of the crossbatch.
d. Throttles – MIL, or above.
e. Engine RPM lockup switch – RELEASE.
* = Airplane AF62-001
** = Airplane AF62-207
NOTE – Releasing engine RPM lockup provides the capability of getting
rid of an engine stall when using throttle retard button on the capsule
emergency descent control grip.
f. Intercom push-pull switch – pull out.
g. IFF – Check at NORM or LOW; MODE 3 selector at
code 77. h. UHF – Check settings so desired communications
can be maintained.
i. Pilot encapsulates first, and controls airplane
unless immediate ejection is necessary.
2. Control Column – stow manually.
Press control column release
pedal and push control column forward to engage the stowage detent.
3. Seat – unlock and retract.
Move seat lock release lever aft
and push seat back into capsule.
4. Capsule Doors – pull close.
Pull feet into capsule and pull
the door handle down sharply and forward to close and latch capsule doors. The
capsule will seal automatically and, if necessary, pressurize.
BALLISTIC ENCAPSULATION
1. Encapsulate Order (Pilot)
Move encapsulate caution light
switch to ON or use intercom to notify copilot to ballistically encapsulate.
Watch for crew encapsulated indicator light to come on when the copilot’s
capsule is closed. Receive copilot acknowledgement of the order.
2. Seat Handgrips – Pull Up.
This raises the seat handgrips,
stows the control column, retracts the seat and exposes the ejection triggers.
WARNING!
• Do not touch either trigger when
seat is retracted and handgrips are up, as seat is fully armed and the catapult
can fire.
• Both heel pedals must be pressed
back before capsule doors will close.
ENCAPSUALTED DESCENT IN THE
AIRPLANE
1. Emergency descent control grip
– remove from upper left survival kit and use trim button as required.
2. Throttle retard button – as
required. (C and CP)
a. Pilot and Copilot must press and button momentarily and release to
start movement of bypass doors and throat panels.
NOTE. When throttle retard button is used, the engine inlet bypass
doors and throat panels move to a failsafe position (throat opens to 39 inches
and bypass area increases to 2400 square inches). The resultant bypass door
opening causes an airplane nose-up trim change. Therefore, be prepared to apply
nose down trim immediately after pressing the throttle retard button.
b. Press either button in short
beeps to retard RPM slowly so that large changes in airplane trim do not occur.
CAUTION
To prevent inlet unstart, RPMs must not be reduced to idle in less than
5 seconds.
NOTE
• All six engines are retarded
simultaneously using the throttle retard button
• Throttle settings cannot be
advanced until capsule is opened.
3. Seat handgrips – unlock and
stow. Unlock and lower handgrips to the stowed position if an immediate
ejection is not expected.
WARNING
Do not touch ejection triggers because the seat is fully armed and
catapult could fire.
4. Decelerate and descend.
Descent at 450 knots IAS minimum to a cabin altitude of 42,000 feet.
Because of the limited control available, maintain a wings-level descent.
Remember – this is only the
encapsulation and ejection part of the process – manual de-encapsulation is
covered in another section! Clearly the process was complex.
Mr Burton also appears to state
that he was present during Al White’s de-briefing following the accident: ‘During a debriefing at the EAFB hospital,
Al explained that he had encapsulated and was set to eject when he looked over
to see that Cross was not properly preparing for ejection. He was pushing on
the panel trying to force his seat back into the capsule which was the correct
procedure in a B 58 which Cross had been flying prior to his assignment to the
XB 70A. Al said that he opened his capsule and was trying to show Cross what to
do when the ship went out of control.
I was fortunate to talk with Al
White out at the Air Force Museum in Ohio in the 1980s and, by combining the
notes from these interviews and the XB-70 Accident/Incident Report I was able
to put together the following for my book. Incidentally, the XB-70
Accident/Incident Report has certain aspects to it redacted (blacked out).
Nothing sinister or ‘conspiracy theory’ should be read into this; to quote the
letter to me from The HQ Air Force Safety Center that was sent accompanying the
accident report.
‘Portions of the safety report have been redacted (blacked out). They
are not releasable for the following reasons:
a. The safety investigation board’s analysis and recommendations are
exempt from disclosure under the United States Code, Title 5, Section 552(b)(5)
and Department of Defense Regulation (DODR) 5400.7/Air Force Supplement
C3.2.l.5. Release of this information would have a stifling effect on the
deliberative process of Air Force officials.
b. The statements of any witnesses giving unswom testimony before the
safety investigation board, as well as any direct or implied references to such
testimony, are exempt from disclosure under the United Sates Code, Title 5,
Section 552(b)(5) and Department of Defense Regulation (DODR) 5400.7/Air Force
Supplement C3.2.l.5. In order to promote full disclosure, some witnesses are
promised by the safety investigation board that their testimony will be used
solely for mishap prevention and for no other purpose. This promise of
confidentiality is made in order to encourage witnesses to disclose to the
investigating board everything they know about the mishap even though the
statements they make may be against their personal interest or possibly incriminating.
Pursuant to his authority, when a mishap report is deemed historical,
the Air Force Chief of Safety can, under certain circumstances, release the
safety board’s findings. He has done so in this case.
Now, to what appeared in my book:
Al White: ‘The airplane yawed abruptly and very violently to the right.
It was so violent I thought the nose would break off. Then it was upside down
and nose down, and then right side up and nose up. It did this twice and the
second time around a big piece of the left wing broke off.
These were unstabilized rolls and
the G forces were fierce. It was probably the Gs that finally tore the wing off
after it had been weakened when Walker fell on it. The force on me was violent,
throwing me ahead and to the left. I couldn't move against the Gs. But then it
settled into a flat spin. This gave it a more or less fixed axis somewhere back
along the fuselage and it was more stable but out of control, of course.
Centrifugal force was still shoving me forward, but at least I could move a
little.
When it nosed up out of the second tumble, I
began trying to encapsulate'
To encapsulate and eject from an
XB-70A required two conscious, deliberate actions on the part of the pilot to
touch off a finely integrated sequence of events, most of them powered by
explosive charges.
The first action was to pull up
either or both hinged, yellow hand-grips built into the front edges of the
armrests. The second action was squeeze either left or right or both triggers
set into the yellow handles. This simultaneously slammed the pilot's seat back
about one and a half feet deep into the upright box of the capsule and jerked
his shoulder harness so rigidly tight that he can scarcely move. It also forced
the aircraft’s control column forward to provide room for the capsule's
clamshell doors to snap shut from top and bottom. The doors respond to an
involuntary human act when, being whipped back into the capsule, the pilot's
heels whack into a pair of ‘kickers’ as his legs are being doubled up into a near-fetal
position.
When all this has been done, the
pilot is sealed up tight in an individual metal box which carried its own
life-support system.
The pulling of the triggers set
off the final sequence: first the overhead hatch blew off, rapidly followed by
the firing of a rocket which shot the capsule, pilot and all, 300 feet above
the aircraft.
White's first action slammed him
back into the capsule recess and, according to plan, jerked his shoulder
harness tighter than any corset. His heels struck the door-triggering device
and set off that charge. But he was immediately conscious of excruciating pain.
Fighting the forces of the XB-70's spin, his right elbow had been doubled
outward as he pulled the yellow handle, and now it was trapped outside the capsule
at the hinge point of the clamshell doors. As a result the doors could not
close shut, six inches of his own doubled elbow was outside the capsule and,
with the shoulder harness straining backward, his right hand jammed against the
yellow handle and the elbow locked outside, he could not get free.
‘The capsule not only had me trapped, but it
hurt like hell. I was sure the arm was broken—at the minimum.’ White recalled
later.
Using his left hand, White pried
painfully at his right fingers, trying to work them loose from the yellow
handle. They would not come free. He could have pulled the left trigger and
fired his capsule out of the aircraft. But the clearance between the ejecting
capsule and edge of the hatch frame was only four inches. Had he pulled the
trigger, part of his elbow would have been sliced off as though by a
guillotine. Spinning, in agony, and being hauled in two directions, he knew
what the prospect was.
This part clearly shows that
White was following/had followed the first part of the Ballistic Encapsulation
part of the Flight Manual process – a process was irreversible.
‘It didn't help any that, with
that crazy tumbling and the spin, I was completely disoriented. And I could see
Carl Cross. His head was bobbing around as though he was working real hard at
something himself. I don't know why, but I knew he hadn't begun to encapsulate
because he was still forward in the thing: his seat didn't move back. That was
why I could still see him out of the corner of my eye. I wanted to talk to him
and tried to yell, but I guess with the pain and confusion I was only
grunting.’
The doomed Valkyrie was falling
fast and White, having been pulled away from the instruments, had no way of
knowing how soon the XB-70A would hit. He wrestled frantically with his arm.
‘I stopped once. It sounds
insane, but I debated whether to eject and cut my arm off or stay and go in
with the airplane. And there was Carl to think about, even though there was no
possible way I could physically help him."
These comments show a number of
things – firstly, Cross had not begun the encapsulation process, and secondly
Al White knew there was no way he could help him. Mr Burton’s statement of ‘ Al said that he opened his capsule and was
trying to show Cross what to do when the ship went out of control…’ is
seemingly at odds which what Al White told me and the Accident Investigation
team, and is also at odds with what was and what not possible in the Aircraft’s
Flight Manual.
One only has to look at the
illustrations at the end of this report to see how little visibility and
movement Al White had. To continue with the story:
Then
White's left hand worked one right finger free, then another, then all of them
and he pulled the now unlocked hand away from the yellow handle. In agony, he
finally dragged the wounded arm and elbow inside with him. White said that it
seemed as if minutes passed while he wrestled with the arm, but actually just
about 86 seconds elapsed between the time the XB- 70 began toppling out of
control and his chute blossomed.
"Once that arm was in I
didn't waste any time, I didn't know where we were or how close to going
in. I pulled the trigger, the
rocket fired and I went out with the capsule doors still open. The shot gave my
head a hell of a jerk on top of the snap in the neck I'd got when the seat went
back."
The capsule doors were still open
when he ejected. Since he was now well below 15,000 feet, his chute opened
almost immediately. A new peril
was immediate - the spinning XB-70A swung past what seemed like only inches
from his capsule.
‘That long nose went by and I
thought God, the next time that big bastard comes around it's going to get me.
At that point the airplane and I must have been falling at the same speed. It
scared me."
The capsule doors were still wide
open and White wanted them closed. Although the charge which should have closed
them was gone they could be closed manually by pulling a handle on the upper
door.
White wanted them closed for two
reasons. He felt exposed with only the nylon straps of his harness between him
and the void. The second reason was more imperative: his trapped arm had
interrupted one more vital event in the escape sequence. At that altitude an
XB-70A capsule, weighing with pilot approximately 800 pounds, falls fast even
with its parachute open - 32 feet per second compared to the approximate 22 fps
of a man with an ordinary
parachute. To absorb the shock of landing, a pneumatic cushion - called the ‘attenuator bag’ - should
have inflated automatically as the main chute deployed. But it had not done so
because the bag could not inflate with the lower door open and swung down
against it. Al wanted the door closed so he could inflate the bag with a manual
backup system.
'I didn't want to hit without
that bladder blown up. The engineers had calculated that to land without the
bag might cost a man a broken back. But it didn't work. Even after I got the
doors closed I couldn't find it. I was still disoriented and concerned about a
lot of things: Carl, whether he was out: the junk falling around me: and a
terrible coldness. Shock, I guess - that on top of the sweat from working to
free my arm.
Then I heard the XB-70A hit. It
made a terrible explosion and an enormous plume of smoke came up.
Cotton watched the descending parachute
and thought for a time that White would fall into the XB-70's pyre. But then he
saw that an easterly wind would carry the capsule clear.
At five minutes and 22 seconds
after the accident and four
minutes and 11 seconds behind his dead aircraft. White's capsule was about to
hit.
The wreck site was a few miles
north of Barstow, California.
Major Cross's body was found in the XB-70A with his seat still forward
in the ejection capsule. He may never have been able to begin the escape sequence,
perhaps because of the same violent forces which had nearly killed Al White.
Conclusion
So, that is the new evidence
married to what was already known. In my opinion Mr Burton has added new
information into the background, especially to the revelations relating to the
seat ejection simulator.
Mr Burton’s comments ‘According to the log book, Major Cross had
initialed the required practice time. However, the simulation crew told us that
he never got in the seat he
just came, initialed the log book, and left’ is, from all accounts
available to me unsubstantiated and unproven. I will leave the reader to draw their own conclusions.
Graham M Simons
May be used without charge, as
long as due credit is given.
4th April 2015
3 comments:
Excellent article. Bravo!
Great article. I was looking for information about this strange incident.
I've researched the matter of Cross's failure to encapsulate and eject, for several years. This text, appropriately referenced and contextualized, is by far the best evidence that we will ever have of any resolution. Thank you!
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