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A Steak for Free


Text: Richard Plos

Illustration: Stanislav Tarasovič

Cat. No. 8079


The left hand moves the lever forward to the full throttle while the right hand pushes the stick forward. The aircraft tilts its nose and the engine yells at full power. The airspeed indicator needle moves up the scale towards the top value rapidly. Just a bashing moment, the nose screams in a protest, and the reducer breaks off! The propeller immediately exceeds its maximum revolutions, the blades break off, and the cone follows. The aircraft, suddenly “tail heavy”, rises its crippled nose wildly upwards. The overwhelming overload knocks the pilot unconscious, and he only regains consciousness after a few seconds at 40,000 ft. The nose of the aircraft is deformed, one cover panel torn off. The forces during the transition from dive to climb bent the wings to an unusual dihedral, but the aircraft remains controllable, so the pilot puts it into a glide and turns towards the base. After a few dozen of minutes, the wheels of the crippled Spitfire Mk.XI touch down on the runway at Farnborough. It is April 27, 1944 and W/Cdr Anthony F. Martindale has just recorded the highest speed ever achieved by a piston aircraft. As the record shows, before the reducer broke down, the airspeed was over 700 mph, knocking the Mach 0.92!

Cut, a three-and-a-half-year fast forward. This time, the pilot turns on the four chambers of the XLR-11-RM-3 rocket engine, one after the other, giving it a maximum thrust of 6,000 lbf (26.5 kN). The orange Bell X-1, looking like a .50 bullet, slices the air with its thin wings like a butter knife. The speed increases steadily, the needle of the machmeter easily surpassing the heroic performance of W/Cdr Martindale and his poor Spitfire. Quite smoothly and without vibration, the gauge moves past Mach 1 and slowly continues on. On reaching Mach 1.06, the rocket engine falls silent after twenty seconds of work and the pilot takes the aircraft into a glide. It takes nearly 14 minutes to descend from 42,000 feet and the wheels touch down on the runway at Rogers Dry Lake. It’s October 14, 1947, and Charles “Chuck” Yeager has just become the fastest man on the planet and the first to break the speed of sound. Ironically, he achieved this feat as an incapacitated pilot. But that was discovered only when it was all over...

Prior to the record-breaking flight, which was scheduled for Tuesday, Chuck and his wife were supposed to take a weekend trip, but a pregnant Glennis wasn’t feeling well, so they stayed home. On Sunday, she was better, so they at least went to dinner at the Happy Bottom Riding Club, part of a large ranch built near the base by Florence Lowe “Pancho” Barnes, a pilot who had competed in air races in the prewar years with the famous Amelia Earhart and, among other things, had flown in Howard Hughes’ famous film Hell’s Angels (1930). She also announced at the beginning of the X-1 program that the first pilot to break the speed of sound would get a free steak in her restaurant.

That evening Chuck still had to pay for his dinner and then he and Glennis decided to go horseback riding. Someone slammed the ranch gate, which Yeager didn’t expect. His horse reared up and jumped sideways and the rider left his saddle involuntarily. Two broken ribs were the toll, but rather than confess to the flight surgeon, which would have taken himself out of flying for a while, he went to his friend veterinarian. And because he found he was unable to close the cockpit door with his right hand, flight engineer Jack Ridley cut off his broom handle so he could use it as an improvised lever. Once the door was closed and the necessary checks were made to release the X-1 from the mother B-29, nothing could stop Yeager!

The whole situation was depicted in The Right Stuff (1983) movie, in which Chuck was played by Sam Shepard, while Ed Harris portrayed the second American astronaut, John Glenn, and Scott Glenn played the first American in space, Alan Shepard... Interesting names coincidence, isn’t it? Kim Stanley portrayed the flamboyant ranch owner, and five years after The Right Stuff, a movie was made about “Pancho” Barnes herself, starring Valerie Bertinelli.

Stanislav Tarasovich’s painting, boxart of kit Cat. No. 8079, depicts aircraft number 46-063, the second prototype operated by the NACA (National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics). Chuck Yeager never flew it, but the entire X-1 program is forever associated with him and his record-breaking flight. And the film’s conversation between “Pancho” and Gordon Cooper’s wife is a testament to how dangerous the work of test pilots was, regardless of military or NACA affiliation:

Trudy Cooper: “I just noticed that a fancy pilot like Slick over there doesn’t have his picture on your wall. What do you have to do to get your picture up there anyway?

Pancho Barnes: "You have to die, sweetie …"

12/2023
Info EDUARD 12/2023

Good day, Dear Friends, After a three-year break, we made a return to Telford, and it was a triumphant return at that! After all, Britain is the cradle of our business, and the Telford event is the biggest exhibition in our field and it would be a mistake to miss it. Our plan is to continue attending such events, beginning with Nuremberg in January/February.

12/1/2023

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