Neil Williams (pilot)

Summary

Neil Williams (1934–1977) was a Welsh aerobatics pilot.

Neil Williams
Born1934
Died11 December 1977
Sierra de Guadarrama
Cause of deathAir crash
NationalityBritish
EducationEmpire Test Pilots' School
Spouse(s)Jean (1st wife), Lynn (2nd wife)
RelativesElizabeth (daughter), David (son), Lynn (brother)
AwardsQueen's Commendation for Valuable Service in the Air
Aviation career
Air forceRAF
Racing career
Best positionBiancotto Trophy, FAI European Aerobatic Championships, Coupé Champion
AircraftStampe SV.4B, Zlín

Life and career edit

Williams was born in 1934 in Canada and educated in Wales, where he first learned to fly in 1951. After completing an engineering apprenticeship he joined the Royal Air Force (RAF), and was trained as a pilot in Canada, winning the course trophy and gaining his wings. He served in Cyprus as a Canberra photo-reconnaissance pilot, and returned to the United Kingdom in 1961, where he joined an experimental squadron. In 1962 he graduated from the Empire Test Pilots' School (ETPS), and also started competitive aerobatic flying. He won all the U.K. domestic competitions in 1965 and went on to compete in the World Aerobatic Championships (FAI WAC).

In 1965 he was the highest placed British pilot in the Lockheed Trophy, and was Europe's best biplane pilot when he flew a Stampe SV.4B to 4th place in the Top French competition. He gained another 'first' for Britain in the following year by reaching the finals of the FAI WAC, and in 1967, flying a standard two-seater Zlin Akrobat, he won the Biancotto Trophy. In 1970 he was awarded the Queen's Commendation for Valuable Service in the Air,[1] when he successfully crash landed a Zlin after a wing folded during aerobatic training.[2][3] Three weeks after receiving the replacement Zlin from Czechoslovakia, he reached 5th place in the FAI WAC, the highest place achieved by any Zlin pilot.

1974 was marked by the British teams' outright victory in the FAI European Aerobatic Championships and Neil's solo win in the Coupé Champion in France. In 1975 he became British Aerobatic Champion for the eleventh time, and in 1976 reached 4th place in the FAI WAC in Kiev. Captain of the British Aerobatic Team from 1966 until his death in 1977, he regularly flew at airshows and was best known for his displays in the Pitts Special, Rothmans Aerobatic Team, Spitfire, and the famous machines of the Shuttleworth Collection and for his test flying of unusual and tricky aeroplanes.

Death edit

 
CASA 2.111 (Spanish-built Heinkel He 111) of the type Williams was in when he was killed

He was killed, along with three others, on 11 December 1977, when the CASA 2.111 he was ferrying from Cuatro Vientos Airport to the United Kingdom crashed in poor visibility into the Sierra de Guadarrama mountains north of Madrid.[4] The other deceased were his second wife, Lynn, Blackbushe Airport Chief Engineer (retired), Joseph Donaghy, and Blackbushe Ground Controller, Stephen Parnell.[5]

The British Aerobatic Association organized the Neil Williams Memorial Trophy.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "No. 45384". The London Gazette (Supplement). 4 June 1971. p. 5988.
  2. ^ Zlin wing Structural Failure Report, Flight International, 18 June 1970.
  3. ^ Official UK report, Official UK report
  4. ^ Flight International 24 June 1978, p. 1913.
  5. ^ Flight International 24 December 1977, p. 1846.
  6. ^ Neil Williams Memorial Trophy, The British Aerobatic Association

Further reading edit

  • AAIB Accident Report
  • Geza Szurovy, Mike Goulian.Basic Aerobatics, TAB Books, ISBN 978-0-07-062926-4
  • "Neil Williams". Flight International. 24 December 1977, p. 1846.
  • Williams, Neil. (1975) Aerobatics, Airlife Publishing Ltd, Ramsbury, UK. ISBN 0-9504543-0-3
  • Williams, Neil (2003). Aerobatics. Marlborough, UK: Crowood Press. ISBN 9780950454306.
  • Neil Williams, Aerobatic results, german-aerobatics-com Archived 15 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine