JDK wrote:
IMHO, Ray, Bob Hoover and several others are 'among the best' airshow pilots with precise control at low level. But then so were Art Scholl and Neil Williams - collision with terrain did for them, tragically (not low flying, to be accurate).
We'll probably never know exactly with Art Scholl, but his death did not appear to be from a low flying incident as you correctly state. While factual that he did impact terrain (water), it may have been due to mechanical or failure or a loss of control due to the camera equipment he was carrying.
Quote:
Arthur Everett Scholl (24 December 1931 – 16 September 1985) was a renowned American aerobatic pilot, aerial cameraman, flight instructor and educator based in Southern California. He died during filming of Top Gun when his Pitts S-2 camera plane never recovered from a flat spin and plunged into the Pacific Ocean. Scholl's last words were "I have a problem — I have a real problem." The exact cause of the fatal crash remains unknown, as neither the plane, nor Scholl's body, were ever recovered.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_Scholl
I also don't recall Bob Hoover doing any particularly low flying in his civilian career, unless you count his landing demontrations (Tennessee Waltz, etc.). Bob Hoover also advocated energy management. I'm sure he made mistakes and was lucky during his career, human factors being what they are. I doubt that anyone considers low-level aerobatics to be entirely safe.