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I was watching the Discovery Channel program comparing the
F-86 and Mig-15 and heard that the F-86 can break the sound barrier. I know that this has been claimed many time before but is that the official position of the US Air Force? Is Yeager still officially the first man to break the sound barrier? |
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I was watching the Discovery Channel program comparing the
F-86 and Mig-15 and heard that the F-86 can break the sound barrier. I know that this has been claimed many time before but is that the official position of the US Air Force? Certainly the F-86 can break the sound barrier in a shallow dive. Many pilots got thier first taste of sonic flight that way. I have read that a Canadian pilot used to open airshows by doing just that in the days before sonic booms were outlawed in most areas. Is Yeager still officially the first man to break the sound barrier? Yes. Though anecdotal evidence suggests strongly that George Welch was probably the first pilot to break the sound barrier there will probably never be any way to prove it in the same way that Yeager's flight was. Apparently though some time ago the Air Force took to qualifying Yeager's flight as the first sustained supersonic flight in level attitude. John Dupre' |
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![]() "JDupre5762" I have read that a Canadian pilot used to open airshows by doing just that in the days before sonic booms were outlawed in most areas. I witnessed an F86 braking the sound barrier as a young fellow at an airshow in Regina Saskatchewan in the 1950's. Test pilot, Jan Zurakowski is given credit for breaking the sound barrier in a prototype CF100 in 1951 or 1952. Quite an accomplishment in a straight winged aircraft of this type. The Mk-5 Clunk could not do this as wing tip extensions were added to improve operational ceiling extending the life of the CF100 for a few more years. Jan retired after the stupid cancellation of the CF105 Avro Arrow project. Ed |
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![]() (Corey C. Jordan) wrote: On 22 Sep 2003 02:27:51 GMT, (JDupre5762) wrote: Yes. Though anecdotal evidence suggests strongly that George Welch was probably the first pilot to break the sound barrier there will probably never be any way to prove it in the same way that Yeager's flight was. Apparently though some time ago the Air Force took to qualifying Yeager's flight as the first sustained supersonic flight in level attitude. John Dupre' Indeed, the evidence is very strong. However, the eggheads involved in the XS-1 program were well aware that Welch did it without running his recorders, and had no intention of admitting it publically due to clear instructions from the Secretary of the Air Force not to steal the XS-1s thunder. After Blackburn's book was published and additional material showed up on the internet, the XS-1 and Yeager defenders came out of their holes howling like the Knights of Columbus did over the Sopranos. "Lies, all lies!!!!" "Show us the proof!", they demanded. So, we showed them what we had (and we have a lot, some of which I got from the Welch family). "Not good enough!", they cried. I mean, the evidence is compelling and I would not want to be on trial for my life in the face of such evidence. But, if you understand the anal thought process of the typical egghead, you'll also understand that nothing will be good enough. On the other hand, the USAF quickly amended their claim for Yeager to read; "in level flight". Clearly, THEY realised that the evidence was enough to throw great doubt on their 50 year-old milestone. Better to redefine the accomplishment rather than explain why they buried Welch's forays in the weeks prior to Yeager's first Mach 1 run. I can't blame the USAF for covering up the event. Most of their research budget was invested in the XS-1, as well as their prestige. God forbid that a production prototype should push past Mach 1 first! After Welch's first "supersonic" dive, NAA was ordered to bolt the XP-86's landing gear down for future test flights to prevent a repeat. NAA went along with that for a few days, but ultimately let Welch fly it again with the gear up with Kindleburger and Atwood's blessing. After Yeager finally achieved the initial program goal of Mach 1+, the USAF allowed NAA to run a fully instrumented speed run (November of 1947). Finally, the XP-86 was officially established as being Mach 1+ capable. Yet, to protect their precious XS-1 program, the USAF delayed announcing the accomplishement until April of 1948, and never accurately stated when the flight took place. Nonetheless, Welch flew the same aircraft, unmodified from the early October flights and flew the same flight profile as he did on October 1. So, the question I have for the eggheads is this; knowing that Welch had an aircraft capable of Mach ; knowing that he had opportunity; knowing he stated he was going to do it. Knowing that it was witnessed by hundreds on the ground; knowing that Welch claimed he did it; knowing that he was first to report seeing what has become known as "Mach jump"; can they prove that he did not exceed Mach 1 on October 1, 1947? Of course they can't. The volume of evidence (that mentioned above being only a very small fraction of what is known) is impressive and impossible to ignore. Wisely, Yeager has been silent on the topic but, without a doubt would have done exactly what Welch did had he been in the cockpit of the XP-86. This is the stuff guys like Yeager and Welch live for. By the way, is anyone aware that Welch flew several combat sorties in the F-86 in Korea (as a civilian). Like Lindbergh in the SWPA, Welch was in theater showing F-86 pilots the strengths of the F-86. Family members state that Welch shot down several Migs during his brief assignment. However, unlike his Mach 1 adventures, there exists no evidence that this is true beyond his logbook entries. To my knowledge, no USAF pilots who were there have substantiated this. My regards, Widewing (C.C. Jordan) http://www.worldwar2aviation.com http://www.netaces.org http://www.hitechcreations.com Was this the same George Welch who flew a P-40 out of Halewia, Oahu on the morning of 7 Dec 41, killing pair of Vals, a Kate and a Zero, before being a P-38 ace in SWPA? IIRC he was KIFA in a F-100 in the mid 1950s. Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
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On Tue, 23 Sep 2003 13:24:21 GMT, "Matt Wiser" wrote:
Was this the same George Welch who flew a P-40 out of Halewia, Oahu on the morning of 7 Dec 41, killing pair of Vals, a Kate and a Zero, before being a P-38 ace in SWPA? IIRC he was KIFA in a F-100 in the mid 1950s. Yes, this was the same lunatic. LOL Welch was credited with 4 kills at Pearl Harbor and his wingman (Taylor) swears that Welch got another two that crashed out to sea. His wingman shot down another two and damaged several others. Between them, they accounted for 6 kills, two prabables and several damaged. That's nearly 21% of all Japanese combat losses at Pearl (as much as 28% if you counted the two probably shot down). Later while flying P-39Ds, Welch shot down three more fighters (one sortie) bringing his score up to seven. After he transferred to the 8th FG flying P-38s, he added nine more before a life-threatening case of malaria sent him home. Welch is one of only a handful of American fighter pilots that scored kills in three different fighter types. Every time Welch shot down any Japanese aircraft, he got at least 2, and killed 4 on two occasions. His peers believed that had he not become deathly ill, he would have challenged, and possibly even outpaced Bong and McGuire in total victories. As it was, Hap Arnold set up an interview for Welch with North American. Some believe that this was his way of making up for Welch not getting the CMoH due to someone in the chain of command disapproving the recommendation because Welch took off without specific orders. Arnold was incensed with Squadron CO Maj Gordon H. Austin, but it seems Austin probably approved the recommendation. Although bounced back to CONUS, Austin was given command of a P-40 outfit that he took to North Africa where he shot down 3 enemy aircraft while flying more than 100 combat hours. Later Austin commanded the 319th BG (a B-26 outfit) where he logged another 115 hours. In 1944 he was transferred stateside where he served in many posts until he retired as a highly decorated Major General in 1966. If he is still alive, he would be 90 years old. It's likely that someone in the USAAF command structure at Pearl Harbor gave Welch the deep six. Who that was is unknown to me. My regards, Widewing (C.C. Jordan) http://www.worldwar2aviation.com http://www.netaces.org http://www.hitechcreations.com |
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![]() (Corey C. Jordan) wrote: On Tue, 23 Sep 2003 13:24:21 GMT, "Matt Wiser" wrote: Was this the same George Welch who flew a P-40 out of Halewia, Oahu on the morning of 7 Dec 41, killing pair of Vals, a Kate and a Zero, before being a P-38 ace in SWPA? IIRC he was KIFA in a F-100 in the mid 1950s. Yes, this was the same lunatic. LOL Welch was credited with 4 kills at Pearl Harbor and his wingman (Taylor) swears that Welch got another two that crashed out to sea. His wingman shot down another two and damaged several others. Between them, they accounted for 6 kills, two prabables and several damaged. That's nearly 21% of all Japanese combat losses at Pearl (as much as 28% if you counted the two probably shot down). Later while flying P-39Ds, Welch shot down three more fighters (one sortie) bringing his score up to seven. After he transferred to the 8th FG flying P-38s, he added nine more before a life-threatening case of malaria sent him home. Welch is one of only a handful of American fighter pilots that scored kills in three different fighter types. Every time Welch shot down any Japanese aircraft, he got at least 2, and killed 4 on two occasions. His peers believed that had he not become deathly ill, he would have challenged, and possibly even outpaced Bong and McGuire in total victories. As it was, Hap Arnold set up an interview for Welch with North American. Some believe that this was his way of making up for Welch not getting the CMoH due to someone in the chain of command disapproving the recommendation because Welch took off without specific orders. Arnold was incensed with Squadron CO Maj Gordon H. Austin, but it seems Austin probably approved the recommendation. Although bounced back to CONUS, Austin was given command of a P-40 outfit that he took to North Africa where he shot down 3 enemy aircraft while flying more than 100 combat hours. Later Austin commanded the 319th BG (a B-26 outfit) where he logged another 115 hours. In 1944 he was transferred stateside where he served in many posts until he retired as a highly decorated Major General in 1966. If he is still alive, he would be 90 years old. It's likely that someone in the USAAF command structure at Pearl Harbor gave Welch the deep six. Who that was is unknown to me. My regards, Widewing (C.C. Jordan) http://www.worldwar2aviation.com http://www.netaces.org http://www.hitechcreations.com There are two possible suspects:Brigadier General Howard Davidson, who commanded the 14th Pursuit Wing on Oahu, or Major General Fredrick L. Martin, who commanded the HAF. Unless there was a Pursuit Group CO somewhere in the middle-weren't these two generals sacked? Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
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On Sun, 21 Sep 2003 21:16:00 -0500, wrote:
I was watching the Discovery Channel program comparing the F-86 and Mig-15 and heard that the F-86 can break the sound barrier. I know that this has been claimed many time before but is that the official position of the US Air Force? Is Yeager still officially the first man to break the sound barrier? No, George Welch was the first to exceed Mach 1 in a dive with the XP-86. See: http://home.att.net/~historyzone/Welch2.html I also have a better source, my father. He was part of the design team for the Sabre at North American and they were informed about this BEFORE Yeager broke the sound barrier. He had to keep mum on this for a long time though. |
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In article , Dan
Shackelford wrote: On Sun, 21 Sep 2003 21:16:00 -0500, wrote: I was watching the Discovery Channel program comparing the F-86 and Mig-15 and heard that the F-86 can break the sound barrier. I know that this has been claimed many time before but is that the official position of the US Air Force? Is Yeager still officially the first man to break the sound barrier? No, George Welch was the first to exceed Mach 1 in a dive with the XP-86. See: http://home.att.net/~historyzone/Welch2.html I think you misunderstood the question. The question isn't whether it was Welch or Yeager, but who the USAF officially recognizes. At this point in time, it is still Yeager. -john- -- ================================================== ================== John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708 Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com ================================================== ================== |
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On Sun, 21 Sep 2003 21:16:00 -0500, VH wrote:
I was watching the Discovery Channel program comparing the F-86 and Mig-15 and heard that the F-86 can break the sound barrier. I know that this has been claimed many time before but is that the official position of the US Air Force? Is Yeager still officially the first man to break the sound barrier? Breaking Mach 1 was a standard flight in the curriculum for Perrin AFB's advanced flight training school for F86D interceptor pilots. You went up to max alititude, nosed over into a full vertical dive with full throttle and watched the Mach needle hit 1 before reducing power and starting the pullout. This was in 1957. No biggie, except the ego trip of claiming membership in the Machbuster's Club. John Bailey http://home.rochester.rr.com/jbxroads/mailto.html |
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