• About Air & Space
  • Email Updates
  • Member Services
  • Shop
  • Archive
airspacemag.com
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • goSmithsonian
  • Smithsonian magazine
  • Home
  • History of Flight
  • Flight Today
  • Military Aviation
  • Space Exploration
  • Photos & Videos
  • Subscribe
Rare Bear takes off for the Saturday Gold race. On Sunday, pilot John Penney finished first in the Unlimited class. Rare Bear takes off for the Saturday Gold race. On Sunday, pilot John Penney finished first in the Unlimited class.
(Larry Lowe)
  • Flight Today

Notes from the Reno Races

Dispatches from the 2007 National Championship Air Races.

  • By Larry Lowe
  • Air & Space Magazine, September 01, 2007

Photo Gallery

Rare Bear takes off for the Saturday Gold race. On Sunday, pilot John Penney finished first in the Unlimited class.

Notes from the Reno Races

Explore more photos from the story


Article Tools

  • Font
  • Share/Save/Bookmark Share
  • Email
  • Print
  • Digg Digg
  • Comments
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  • RSS
  • Reddit Reddit

    Air & Space contributor Larry Lowe reports from the Reno National Championship Air Races and Airshow, which runs from September 12-16.

    Sunday afternoon: A day at the races

    After the intensity of the week, two days of air racing is just what the doctor ordered—and just what the fans got on Saturday and Sunday. Following the morning events and the opening ceremonies, the Reno, and the natural amphitheater here highlights the grace of their performance. The team’s nine aircraft paid tribute to the fallen racers, adding one figure as a memorial to one of their own team members lost earlier this year. The small CT-114 Tutor trainers flown by the Canadians may not have the sleekness of the Thunderbirds’ F-16s or the Blue Angels’ F-18s, but the Snowbirds more than make up for it with the elegance of their performance.

    Details of this week’s accidents have begun to emerge from the fog of speculation. The biplane that crashed on Tuesday night had had a number of modifications and had never flown in the configuration it flew on Tuesday. Another biplane racer told me he believed that overeagerness to participate in the races was a factor in the accident. Taking off uphill on Runway 8, the engine, which had not appeared to be performing well on the ground, failed shortly after liftoff. There’s a small bluff off the end of the runway that precluded a straight ahead roll out. While attempting to turn to find a place to land, the airplane stalled at low altitude.

    An unlimited pilot who witnessed Brad Morehouse’s accident on Thursday said that in the grip of the wake turbulence, the L-39 Albatros rolled twice, but that Morehouse regained control of the airplane prior to impact. Right side up, aileron against the roll, he was within 10 feet or so of pulling the jet out of the descent when he hit the ground.

    The two formula pilots were heading uphill into the early morning sun. Overtaking pilot Jason Somes had passed wide as the pair Gary Hubler’s airplane, still on the inside of the turn, accelerated—as formula ones are prone to do when the airspeed gets high enough where the high-pitch racing prop can begin to let the engine develop higher RPM. As both planes converged on the pylon, neither could see the other, and by sheer chance the two intersected the same point at the same time. “You could try to do that with a couple of airplanes 100 times and not get it right,” a pilot who saw the event told me. The two racers converged, and Hubler’s airplane shredded the aft end of Somes’.

    Jason Somes suffered substantial injuries, and at first it seemed as if he might lose the use of one eye. Successful surgery on his face and eye saved his sight. Somes participated in the Sunday opening ceremonies, standing next to Reno Air Race Association CEO Mike Houghton, media director Valerie Enos, and Formula One air racing legend Ray Cote.

    “We are fortunate to have the very best, most skilled pilots in the world compete and perform in northern Nevada each year,” Houghton said. “The entire sport mourns the loss of three fierce competitors, and we all mourn the loss of three dear friends.”
    By Sunday it was clear that fears expressed during the stand-down that the accidents might mean the end of air racing at Reno were likely overblown. Although each accident will be reviewed to see if procedures can be improved, racing is almost certainly going to continue at Reno.

    1 2 3 4 5

    Air & Space contributor Larry Lowe reports from the Reno National Championship Air Races and Airshow, which runs from September 12-16.

    Sunday afternoon: A day at the races

    After the intensity of the week, two days of air racing is just what the doctor ordered—and just what the fans got on Saturday and Sunday. Following the morning events and the opening ceremonies, the Reno, and the natural amphitheater here highlights the grace of their performance. The team’s nine aircraft paid tribute to the fallen racers, adding one figure as a memorial to one of their own team members lost earlier this year. The small CT-114 Tutor trainers flown by the Canadians may not have the sleekness of the Thunderbirds’ F-16s or the Blue Angels’ F-18s, but the Snowbirds more than make up for it with the elegance of their performance.

    Details of this week’s accidents have begun to emerge from the fog of speculation. The biplane that crashed on Tuesday night had had a number of modifications and had never flown in the configuration it flew on Tuesday. Another biplane racer told me he believed that overeagerness to participate in the races was a factor in the accident. Taking off uphill on Runway 8, the engine, which had not appeared to be performing well on the ground, failed shortly after liftoff. There’s a small bluff off the end of the runway that precluded a straight ahead roll out. While attempting to turn to find a place to land, the airplane stalled at low altitude.

    An unlimited pilot who witnessed Brad Morehouse’s accident on Thursday said that in the grip of the wake turbulence, the L-39 Albatros rolled twice, but that Morehouse regained control of the airplane prior to impact. Right side up, aileron against the roll, he was within 10 feet or so of pulling the jet out of the descent when he hit the ground.

    The two formula pilots were heading uphill into the early morning sun. Overtaking pilot Jason Somes had passed wide as the pair Gary Hubler’s airplane, still on the inside of the turn, accelerated—as formula ones are prone to do when the airspeed gets high enough where the high-pitch racing prop can begin to let the engine develop higher RPM. As both planes converged on the pylon, neither could see the other, and by sheer chance the two intersected the same point at the same time. “You could try to do that with a couple of airplanes 100 times and not get it right,” a pilot who saw the event told me. The two racers converged, and Hubler’s airplane shredded the aft end of Somes’.

    Jason Somes suffered substantial injuries, and at first it seemed as if he might lose the use of one eye. Successful surgery on his face and eye saved his sight. Somes participated in the Sunday opening ceremonies, standing next to Reno Air Race Association CEO Mike Houghton, media director Valerie Enos, and Formula One air racing legend Ray Cote.

    “We are fortunate to have the very best, most skilled pilots in the world compete and perform in northern Nevada each year,” Houghton said. “The entire sport mourns the loss of three fierce competitors, and we all mourn the loss of three dear friends.”
    By Sunday it was clear that fears expressed during the stand-down that the accidents might mean the end of air racing at Reno were likely overblown. Although each accident will be reviewed to see if procedures can be improved, racing is almost certainly going to continue at Reno.

    Chris Ferguson won the 2007 Biplane Gold championship Sunday morning in his Pitts LR-1, “Miss Gianna,” at a speed of 233.470 miles per hour. The sophisticated “Phantom,” which has been having engine problems all week, pulled out after one lap. Following on Ferguson’s heels were Norman Way at 208.975 in “Magic” and Dennis Vest in “Drag Racer” at 200.924 mph. Rookie Pat McGarry was all smiles in fourth place in a cleaned-up S1S Pitts Special called “Rollin’.”
    David Hoover took first place in the 2007 Formula One Gold Race at 245.669 in his Arnold AR-6 “Endeavor,” followed by George Andre at 238.399 in the Cassutt “Zipper” and Scotty Crandlemire in the Cassutt III “Outrageous” at 237.997.

    In Sport Class, the highly anticipated contest between Andy Chiavetta’s Super Legacy and the NXT racers flown by Jon Sharp and Kevin Eldridge didn’t materialize. The NXT Super Sport raceplanes are wicked fast, the pair posting qualifying times of 378 and 380 miles per hour, speedy enough to beat 16 of the airplanes in the Unlimited field. Chiavetta’s airplane had a reputed 900-horsepower engine built by Greg Stephenson. But a series of gearbox and prop problems kept the four-time Sport Class champion out of today’s race. “I just don’t think we are running well enough to put Rod [Von Grote, the pilot] in the airplane,” said a clearly disappointed Chiavetta.

    In Unlimited, all eyes were on longtime favorite “Rare Bear,” sporting a new paint scheme and under new ownership. The former champion took off for Saturday’s Gold race heat but couldn’t develop full power and placed third at 446.626 behind Matt Jackson in Dreadought at 452.903 mph and Mike Brown in “September Fury” at 470.055. Rare Bear’s crew obviously found the problem, however. The Bear was heard emitting a healthy growl as pilot John Penney opened it up for a full throttle test early Sunday, and the stage was set for a classic Reno shootout between “Rare Bear” and the larger, more powerful Sea Furies.

    In the end, “Rare Bear” took the race in commanding style, with a speed of 478.394 mph. Penney claimed an early lead and never relinquished it. Then, after finishing his race, he called an emergency and had to make a deadstick landing on runway 22.

    Reno is nothing if not dramatic.

    Saturday afternoon: Back to racing

    After all events were suspended on Friday an unnatural calm settled on Reno-Stead airport while fans and racers absorbed the impact of three deaths in four days. On Saturday morning, things began to pick up again. As I write this, Mike Brown’s F7F Tigercat is neck and neck, improbably, with a P-51. Two seconds behind them, a Bearcat and another Mustang are locked in a contest for their position. A string of Mustangs follow up in tight trail. Best of all is the whistling whine of the jet class.

    We’re racing again at Reno.

    Not that everything is completely back to normal. The first accident on Tuesday left experienced racers analyzing the event as professional pilots always do, asking themselves what chain of events left Steve Dari with no more options. His crash had been an operational accident, not a racing accident, and could just as likely have happened elsewhere. That helped the pilots tuck the incident in the back of their minds and move on.

    Thursday’s accident was a far more dramatic blow to the collective psyche. Second year jet racer Brad Morehouse got tangled up in the wake turbulence of the jet in front of him, flipped through a roll and slammed into the ground, shattering the airplane and instantly extinguishing Morehouse’s life. The debris ricocheted into the air and came to rest in a long flaming swath across the show center, the smoke obscuring the home pylon.

    The photo in the Reno Gazette-Journal the next day was dramatic, but not as powerful as it might have been. The press corps self-censored some of the worst pictures, providing images to officials for use in analyzing the accident, but foregoing significant fees by not releasing them for publication.

    Late Friday, I polled the pilots in Sport Class, who delivered a calm, deliberate and consistent message. It had probably been wise to pause, but the consensus was that they know how to police themselves, and were good to go. You could look them in the eye and know it wasn’t the macho talking.

    Friday, noon: Three accidents in four days

    A somber mood. Racing has been suspended for the remainder of today after a mid-air collision in a Formula One race this morning took the life of Gary Hubler of Caldwell, Idaho. Following on the heels of another accident Thursday that killed Brad Morehouse, who was flying an L-39 Albatros jet, race director Mike Houghton decided to call a halt. The unprecedented move will let the presidents of each racing class review the situation with the pilots and make certain "their heads are in the right place" to continue racing, said Houghton.

    Hubler’s fatality is the third in four days, and has taken everyone here aback. I’ll have a fuller report once we get more details.

    Wednesday evening: The calm before the storm

    For the Reno faithful, Wednesday evening is a special time. The qualifying rounds are done, the casual fans have departed, and the sun is slowly working its way toward the western ridge line. A satisfying calm settles in as old friendships are renewed and notes compared. Tomorrow the race begins in earnest as the fastest airplanes in each class take to the course.

    For those who aren’t familiar with this gem of an airshow, the Reno National Championship Air Races are a unique experience. They’re part living history, part technological proving ground, and mostly a hell of a lot of fun for those who make a point to be here every year.

    Back in the 1930s, air racing was as big a part of the national sports scene as NASCAR is today. But after World War II, a string of fatal crashes caused the sport to nearly disappear. It was reinvented here in the 1960s. The high desert outside Reno seemed like the perfect place; there was plenty of room for propeller-driven World War II fighters to make their turns without asking more of the airplane than it could reliably give. And the ethos of Reno was right. It’s a place where prostitution was legal, gambling an industry, and divorce a matter of two weeks and some paperwork; likewise, pilots came to Reno partly for the waivers that exempt them from normal FAA rules. The low flying and excessive speed pilots enjoy in Reno would get them busted for reckless flying in the real world.

    Racing at Reno is old school. Airplanes fly in a cluster around a course defined by phone poles topped by 55-gallon drums, every pilot searching for that elusive edge over his or her opponents. Racing at Reno is less difficult than ordinary airshow flying but arguably more dangerous. That was brought home in a briefing conducted by media manager Valerie Enos, who concludes her pre-race school for reporters with a heartfelt plea for sensitivity in the event a photographer or writer witnesses the end of someone’s racing career. "Remember the pilot flying," she says. "Remember they have a family."

    It’s only Wednesday and Reno ‘07 has already underscored her point. Yesterday a biplane pilot from California, Steve Dari, was killed during practice. Word on the ramp was that the condition of the engine was a factor, but that’s the kind of speculation Enos would just as soon not see offered as reporting. Earlier in the week, a Mustang aborted a high-speed takeoff and ran off the end of the runway. The brakes were so hot that the brush caught fire and the flames destroyed the airframe. Today one T-6 taxied into another, and the latter lost its tail surfaces. The simple fact is that Reno can be riskier than most airshows.

    This evening, after the airspace waiver expires, a pair of F-16s intended for static display on the grounds show up, booming afterburners. The call of the Unlimited course (for airplanes over 4,500 pounds) proves too strong, and the lead pilot roars down to take a lap around the course, while his wingman flies top cover. Few pilots with a high-performance airplane will turn down the chance to run the pylons at Reno—even if it’s an unofficial lap performed solely for bragging rights.

    Other pilots sit under the wings of their racers or around them in the hangars, making small talk. For some, the day before racing includes a frantic effort to rebuild a broken airplane. Andy Chiavetta has taken the engine out of Sport Race #33 and spirited it to a secret location in the mountains near Tahoe, where a mad scientist of the propulsive arts is reputed to live. Sometime past midnight, they will be installing the engine on the airframe in time for the 9:40 a.m. first race Thursday. The Unlimited Gold-winning P-51 Strega is also having engine problems, as is Voodoo, two stalls down.

    The mechanics are focused; there is no time now to waste. In the gathering dusk the Griffon-powered P-51 Precious Metal returns from a photo mission, makes a pass down the runway, and lands.

    Tomorrow we begin.


     
    Comments

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:



    Advertisement


    Most Popular Video

    • Newest
    • Most Viewed
    Jetting Through the Grand Canyon

    Jetting Through the Grand Canyon

    An RAF pilot takes his T-33 on a joyride in 1959.

    Armstrongs Close Call

    Armstrong’s Close Call

    A fiery bailout while training to land on the moon.

    Ares I-X Launch

    NASA tests a prototype of its new Ares 1 crew launcher.

    PTQ: Put Together Quickly

    PTQ: Put Together Quickly

    Watch Boeing technicians repair an airliner—in two minutes.

    Wright B Over Manhattan, 1912

    Wright B Over Manhattan, 1912

    In the winter of 1912, Frank Coffyn filmed the first silent motion pictures of New York ever taken from an airplane.

    Space Station Fly-Around

    Space Station Fly-Around

    Take a narrated tour of the station with the same animation astronauts use in training.

    “A Very Unusual Machine”

    Former astronaut Fred Haise talks about the Lunar Module, the world's first moonship.

    Dodging Missiles

    Dodging Missiles

    F-105 pilots recall the dangers of flying over North Vietnam.

    Lunar Run

    How a plasma-powered rocket would shoot for the moon.

    Chuck Yeager Press Conference, 1953

    Chuck Yeager Press Conference, 1953

    The X-1's pilot describes what it feels like to fly supersonic.

    PTQ: Put Together Quickly

    PTQ: Put Together Quickly

    Watch Boeing technicians repair an airliner—in two minutes.

    Space Station Fly-Around

    Space Station Fly-Around

    Take a narrated tour of the station with the same animation astronauts use in training.

    Wright B Over Manhattan, 1912

    Wright B Over Manhattan, 1912

    In the winter of 1912, Frank Coffyn filmed the first silent motion pictures of New York ever taken from an airplane.

    Dodging Missiles

    Dodging Missiles

    F-105 pilots recall the dangers of flying over North Vietnam.

    Souped-Up Seahawk

    An oddball aircraft outflies its helicopter forefathers.

    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    • Commented
    1. Helo Halo
    2. The Last of the Mohawks
    3. Reno Wrap-up
    4. Welcome to Cyberairspace
    5. The Nightmare of Voskhod 2
    6. B-36: Bomber at the Crossroads
    7. Jumping Ship
    8. Passing the Torch
    9. Secret Space Shuttles
    10. Spooky Enterprise
    1. Oldies and Oddities: Blown Away
    2. The Black Eagle of Harlem
    3. Plausible Denial
    4. Over the No-Fly Zone
    5. "My Body Will Collapse Like a Falling Cherry Blossom"
    6. The Short, Happy Life of the Prop-fan
    7. The Astronaut Jeweler
    8. The Nightmare of Voskhod 2
    9. Are aft-facing airplane seats safer?
    10. Above & Beyond: Canadian Helicopter Force, Afghanistan
    1. Vang's War
    2. Batplane
    3. Jumping Ship
    4. Getting Out
    5. Did Australians light signal fires for the astronauts?
    6. The Black Eagle of Harlem
    7. Steichen's Navy
    8. Glacier Girl
    9. How Things Work: Chandra X-Ray
    10. The Last of the Mohawks

    Advertisement

    Marketplace

    SmithsonianStore

    Night at the Museum Adult Collage Tee
    Item no: 28206

    Window Shopping

    Gifts, Gadgets and Great Finds!

    Travel & Adventure

    A Family Weekend in Washington, D.C.: Featuring "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian"

    Spend a fun-filled weekend with your family discovering the magic of the new feature film, "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" (Jul. 24 - 26, 2009)

    In the Magazine

    In his portrait of the storied racer Rare Bear and its crew, photographer Tyson Rininger captures the sense of anticipation that surrounds air races. “Something’s coming,” this quiet night scene seems to suggest. “Tomorrow, it’s win or lose.”

    November 2009

    • The Bear Is Back
    • Now You See It, Now You Don’t
    • Sweet 17
    • The Shining
    • How the Spaceship Got Its Shape
    • The Book of Hours

    View Table of Contents »

    Snapshot

    Helo Halo

    It's called the Kopp-Etchells Effect.

    Reader Scrapbook

    Send In Your Photos

    Check out our scrapbook of readers' aviation and space pictures. Then add your own.

    Need to Know

    What determines an airplane’s lifespan?

    Some keep flying for decades, while others end up on the scrap heap.

    Smithsonian Journeys

    • Shop
    • Travel
    In the Cockpit

    In the Cockpit: Inside 50 History-Making Aircraft

    Item No. 10304

    Astronomy in Hawaii

    Astronomy in Hawaii

    Gaze at the stars and learn about the Universe from the beautiful island of Hawaii (Apr 29 - May 6, 2010)



    View full archiveRecent Issues

    • In his portrait of the storied racer Rare Bear and its crew, photographer Tyson Rininger captures the sense of anticipation that surrounds air races. “Something’s coming,” this quiet night scene seems to suggest. “Tomorrow, it’s win or lose.”
      Nov 2009


    • Sep 2009


    • Aug 2009

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Air & Space magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Air & Space/Smithsonian magazine has been delighting aerospace enthusiasts with the best writing about their favorite subject since April 1986. As an adjunct of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Air & Space matches the grand scope of the Museum, encompassing every era of aviation and space exploration. With stories that range from the Wright Brothers to the design of NASA's next lunar lander, Air & Space emphasizes the human stories as well as the technology of aviation and spaceflight.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Institution
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Air & Space
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Reader Panel
    • Subscribe
    • RSS

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability