There was one other scary occasion. History was nearly written; the first WC-130 lost in a storm.
When surface winds cannot be estimated at normal flight level due to cloud coverage below it was allowable to descend to as low as 700'MSL.
At such low levels my job was more or less limited to holding a coffee cup, scanning out the windows while standing next to flight engineer, on the flight deck; maybe with a foot up on the center console. I was seeing what appeared to be increasing wave heights and brought it to the crews attention, over intercom. Some quick looks and all returned to their normal modes. A few moments later I tapped the engineer and hollered in his ear, the waves are getting bigger! He looked out the windows then around the pilot's shoulder and booted the pilot's arm off the arm-rest while shouting over the IC, "take us up, take us up"!
It was 1st storm mission, in the left seat, for recently promoted Captain who maintained pressure altimeter flight instead of switching to radar altimeter. You can guess the moral of the story; it's opposite of compliance with flight regulations.
The pilot was politically connected, thus history was never recorded; though he was transferred shortly thereafter .
There was another occasion, unauthorized flight into Cuban Airspace; but, that's for another time.