Before tragic Shockwave crash, I rode fastest semitruck on Earth: What it was like

I sat securely belted into the passenger seat of a truck that happened to have three jet engines strapped to the back of it. 

It was the mid-1990s and we waited at the end of an airport runway in Bloomington, Illinois. I had an idea of what was to come, but not a clear, realistic understanding of it.

It was summer in central Illinois. A heavy, fireproof suit weighed on my work clothes underneath it. The truck’s team required that I wear the suit and the heat was stifling. As a young TV reporter, I was rather naive when I signed a waiver to ride in the Shockwave. 

An airplane appeared above us and the driver, Les Shockley, reached across, pushed down the face shield on my helmet, hit the throttle with his foot and my life would never be the same. The world went white.

Shockley built and designed the truck to be a stunt show novelty. And it was just that, successfully performing without incident at air shows across the country for more than three decades. 

On Saturday, that show, at least the one using the Shockwave, came to a tragic end in a matter of seconds when the jet truck crashed on a runway at the Battle Creek Field of Flight Airshow. The accident killed the driver, Chris Darnell, 40, the only one on board this time. Darnell had been operating the Shockwave since 2012, according to the International Council of Air Shows

‘Living the dream’

The accident Saturday was the result of a mechanical failure, according to a Facebook post written on Saturday by Darnell’s father, Neal Darnell.

“My youngest son passed away from his injuries at approximately 1:01 pm. No one else was involved,” Neal Darnell, founder of Darnell Racing Enterprises, wrote. “We are so sad. He was so well loved by everyone who knew him. Chris so loved the Air Show business. He was ‘Living the Dream’ as he said.”

The Battle Creek Police did not return a call seeking details on the cause of the accident. But a report by Kalamazoo-based WWMT-TV News on Tuesday said a blown rear tire likely set off a chain of events that caused the truck to catch fire and roll off the runway. A severed fuel line likely caused the explosion, Battle Creek Police Chief Jim Blocker said in the article.