Long time ago, but not forgotten!
How check lists can be messed up.
Some experience landing after a strong frontal passage, Baltimore International airport, wind 30+, gusting 45+, not aligned with any runway, in a Cessna 172. Taxiing included down wind. Proper use of aileron and elevator position was critical to success. Fortunately, we were nearly home, a taxi took us the rest of the way.
Years later, flying from Nebraska to Colorado Springs, in July 1978 we landed at Wray, an E Colorado airport with very bad wind and gust conditions to refuel, and taxied to the gas truck. When the gas man came out, he asked if I would like for him to move the truck so I could park into the wind for fueling. No thanks. He did the fueling as I did my usual post/pre flight inspection, but with the control lock in place. After he finished, he moved the truck around behind the 172, and tied a half inch rope from the tail ring to the ladder to the top of his truck, commenting that a gust might overcome my parking brake. Food for serious thought.
It began to dawn on me that this was NORMAL winds, and strong winds were to be expected, that far exceeded this normal. I briefed the next leg, and filed. Some steps are skipped here, as they are not relevant. I untied from the truck, started up, and carefully taxied toward the runway, using great care to have the correct deflection of control surfaces to be safe in the wind. This resulted in my first free and full deflection test.
At the run-up pad, I turned directly into the wind, and proceeded in a normal run-up, as that wind continued to rock and roll our little plane. I could have put the control lock in place to hold the yoke steady, but had my wife hold it, while I did the two handed throttle and mag switch dance. I think that I did a full and free movement after the run-up, as I always do. That was the first time I took off in such conditions, but they are normal in that part of the country. Actual altitude 3,700, density altitude nearly 5,000 feet, but plenty of wind nearly down the runway.
IF I had used the control lock, I COULD have taxied straight onto the runway, turned about 20 degrees and departed. With the power to weight that Dale had, in about 3 seconds, the control forces would have made removing my Cessna lock near impossible, and another 3 seconds, I would have been in the air, and doomed.
More than 50 years ago, one of the partners in our Cessna did a run-up with a gusting wind from behind him, and put the gust lock in, forgot it and made a takeoff run, discovered his mistake, and chopped the throttle with the wheels still on the ground. Piston engines go to zero thrust instantly, turbines much slower. He got a second chance, because the wind was right down the runway, he did not drift off into a ditch.
I am not going back to see how many seconds expired between first motion, and in the air, as the exact number is not the issue. What was Dale doing? Setting up the nav equipment for the trip? We will never know what caused Dale to do non standard steps that day, just the results.
The true bottom-line here is that WE, and the pilots we fly with must do the free and full motion before EVERY departure. Even the best of the best can die if they do not.