Chuck Yeager X-1A Mach 2.44 Record and Incident - Audio & Footage (1953-12-12)

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

Комментарии • 111

  • @Flygio
    @Flygio Год назад +19

    Came here directly from chuck book. Amazing

    • @derekcoaker6579
      @derekcoaker6579 Год назад +1

      Same. I started with Bud Anderson's book a while back and thought he had some stories. Yeager's story is almost unbelievable. What amazing men.

    • @fleafrier1
      @fleafrier1 7 месяцев назад +1

      Same also. It was General Boyd’s description of the flight recording that made me have to search for it. That was one tough aircraft to have not broken up. Tough pilot too.

  • @garyseven2798
    @garyseven2798 3 года назад +12

    I have been waiting to hear this recording for 30 years . wow .

  • @mjproebstle
    @mjproebstle 3 года назад +21

    thanks for posting!! never saw this before, amazing!! beyond balls of steel here, incredible!! felt like i was right there.

    • @RetroSpaceHD
      @RetroSpaceHD  3 года назад +4

      Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @EricIrl
      @EricIrl 3 года назад +3

      @@RetroSpaceHD Great stuff - I'd seen much of the footage but never heard the audio, which is eye opening. I like it when he said that, if he'd had a seat (ejector seat) he'd have been out of that plane.

  • @n7346e
    @n7346e Год назад +14

    Speaks to the integrity of the airframe not coming apart at that speed. High marks.

    • @sushimamba4281
      @sushimamba4281 11 месяцев назад +2

      That plane was engineered to withstand 18G!

  • @rivotrich7
    @rivotrich7 3 года назад +20

    Great achievement for 1953! Looks really scary! Thank goodness (Gen) Chuck Yeager was at the controls and saved it.

  • @reinhardt2002
    @reinhardt2002 2 года назад +21

    Epic! Remembering that in the X-1 there was no ejection seat. He wouldn't even have a chance to get out through the hatch.

    • @reinhardt2002
      @reinhardt2002 Год назад +1

      @@karlwithak. In fact, he entered the X-1 through a side hatch.
      And the time he was in serious danger, Yeager tried to the end to control the plane and didn't even mention jumping, as he was at a very high rate of descent.

    • @reinhardt2002
      @reinhardt2002 Год назад

      @@karlwithak. That's not what's in Yeager's bio.
      Sorry, but try to inform yourself instead of hammering things out of his head.
      Read this: Yeager an Autobiography by Chuck Yeager and Leo Janos .

    • @hanzo3188
      @hanzo3188 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@reinhardt2002 this is the x-1A model. It didn't have a side hatch like the first one. It had a modified bubble canopy for metter visibility and it opened upward like a conventional fighter.

    • @alan-sk7ky
      @alan-sk7ky 4 месяца назад

      @@hanzo3188 And was bolted shut once the pilot had got in the the X1a after take off

  • @acb9896
    @acb9896 3 года назад +44

    The amazing part is how he ever got airborne with those Titanium balls he hed.

    • @jessesimmons4503
      @jessesimmons4503 3 года назад +1

      Titanium is the best metal.

    • @neutraIdrop
      @neutraIdrop Год назад

      Titanium is extremely lightweight, idiots.

    • @n7346e
      @n7346e Год назад +4

      Titanium very light.

  • @petermcgill1315
    @petermcgill1315 3 года назад +5

    Was hoping to hear Jack say “he’s uncorked it!” Great video.

  • @larryo6874
    @larryo6874 2 года назад +16

    What is interesting is that the Bell engineers said the plane would become unstable at Mach 2.3 and that’s exactly what happened.

    • @rawnukles
      @rawnukles 10 месяцев назад +2

      Oh, those guys where so dam right. I wondered what they had said. I was thinking they maybe said "don't try and roll it at the top" and he tried to roll it ... found out. Lucky they built it tough .

    • @conorlauren
      @conorlauren 3 месяца назад

      That was why Yeager said those guys were “so right.”

  • @basp-ef7jx
    @basp-ef7jx 3 года назад +9

    Reading chucks book right now.

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere 3 года назад +12

    This tells the story so much better than the movie representation of the flight. Thanks for posting it.

    • @simonnomis5302
      @simonnomis5302 3 года назад +4

      this is after the x1` flight ...its not depicted in the film

    • @chrisbrown7362
      @chrisbrown7362 3 года назад +6

      @@simonnomis5302 They took this incident and the NF-104 crash and put them together in "The Right Stuff" film.

    • @jamierife7789
      @jamierife7789 2 года назад +5

      @@simonnomis5302 It's the X-2 flight in the film, where he cracked the canopy.

    • @SWalker71
      @SWalker71 Год назад

      @@simonnomis5302 Yes it is.

  • @tomw6271
    @tomw6271 5 месяцев назад +4

    This man lived to be almost 100 despite his dangerous life as a fighter ace and test pilot. The same for his friend Bud Anderson who lived to 102. Men just are not made like that any more.

    • @bajajoes1
      @bajajoes1 Месяц назад +1

      Edwards AFB should rename Yeager-Edwards AFB!

  • @DJScaleModels
    @DJScaleModels 3 года назад +7

    Never thought I would hear the legendary Yeager say something with fear in his voice!

    • @billofrightsamend4
      @billofrightsamend4 Год назад +2

      It was the G-Forces, it makes it difficult to talk. But, yeah sounds like he didn't want to fly it a 2nd time.

    • @derekcoaker6579
      @derekcoaker6579 Год назад +2

      ​@@billofrightsamend4 Wasn't just G-Force, he really thought he bought it that day. If you enjoy books, his Autobiography is an amazing read.

  • @tyjones5019
    @tyjones5019 9 месяцев назад +5

    I love John Wayne, but he was at the end of the day just an actor. Chuck is the most actual American badass that I can think of.

    • @paaat001
      @paaat001 2 месяца назад

      Yes he is. But if you talk to the men of that generation, you'll find many more. Unfortunately only about 1% are still with us.

  • @sinclairmarcus
    @sinclairmarcus 3 года назад +4

    Incredible footage.

  • @scottyeager488
    @scottyeager488 2 месяца назад

    Heard the story of this flight for years sitting around the campfire. It's unreal actually getting to hear the actual radio chatter.

  • @SicilyJo
    @SicilyJo 9 месяцев назад

    Admiration for the “steady/Eddie” calmness of communications between Yeager and ground crew. Of course, that’s how they are trained. Wish that kind of keeping your head in crucial situations would overflow into society.

  • @kh40yr
    @kh40yr Год назад +7

    That rudder would have guillotined him if he tried to bail. This recording was on a Smithsonian or Nasa, or some other site I had come across years ago. The most incredible recording of self preservation. Rest in Peace Chuck. Shook the mans hand at a hand carved model signing. I still have the hand carved Normandy P-51 with drops and stows. Chucks signature across the wing, with photo and letter of Authenticity. Amazingly and slightly ironic, he passed away on my birthdate, (December 7th, Pearl Harbor Day).

    • @rfletch62
      @rfletch62 Год назад

      On the F104? The ejection seat fired downward, which made me wonder what the designers were drinking.

    • @alan-sk7ky
      @alan-sk7ky 11 месяцев назад

      x1a canopy was bolted down...

  • @ken-km7kk
    @ken-km7kk Год назад +1

    Awesome post 👍

  • @richdouglas2311
    @richdouglas2311 2 года назад +10

    Badass. Chuck is an American hero. But he was an ornery cuss personally. Still, an amazing pilot, he should have been an astronaut. WWII Ace, shot down behind enemy lines and made his way back. All his test pilot work. But the astronauts were only taking college grads, and Chuck was not that. But he turned out to be a great aerospace engineer in his nearly year-long run up to breaking the sound barrier--and beyond.

    • @michaelbragg6903
      @michaelbragg6903 2 месяца назад

      He never wanted to be an astronaut because there wouldn’t have been any real flying

    • @richdouglas2311
      @richdouglas2311 2 месяца назад

      @@michaelbragg6903 That's not what I gathered from Tom Wolfe's "The Right Stuff" (the book, not the movie). Nor from Yeager's autobiography. It's was more of a fait accompli than anything else. But Yeager knew those NASA guys were heading right to the top of the pyramid, and I wonder if he'd gone just because of that. Speculation, I guess, without going back and re-reading those two books.

    • @michaelbragg6903
      @michaelbragg6903 2 месяца назад

      @@richdouglas2311 If something happened in a Mercury capsule as it was originally designed the astronaut would have relied on the calculations put into the capsule computer. There was no stick or chance to control the spacecraft. They eventually got controls in. That’s why Yeager and the other test pilots at Edwards and maybe Pax River never wanted to join the astronaut corps because they would be passengers in the capsule. The Spam in a can referenced in the book and movie. At least he had control of a plane and his life depended on his skills and the mechanics skills instead of a computer.

    • @richdouglas2311
      @richdouglas2311 2 месяца назад +1

      @@michaelbragg6903 I believe they added those to Grissom's capsule, or perhaps Glenn's.
      It was more than just flying. Yeager recognized that these guys at NASA were going right to the top of the pyramid.

    • @michaelbragg6903
      @michaelbragg6903 2 месяца назад

      @@richdouglas2311 and helped the French resistance

  • @richardjohnson1261
    @richardjohnson1261 23 дня назад

    This story is recounted in Gen. Yeager's book. He did crack the canopy with his helmet. Col. Boyd, his commanding officer, said he bent the control stick, too. Gen. Yeager didn't claim to be the best... he did claim to be among them. However, he said his achievement was to "live to fly another day." This is an example of his doing just that. RIP General. Cheers

  • @ockempson
    @ockempson Год назад +2

    I think I busted the canopy with my head, I don’t know...
    Pure badass

  • @derekcoaker6579
    @derekcoaker6579 Год назад

    Gen. Yeager's story is nothing short of incredible, almost unbelievable.

  • @gmaglio
    @gmaglio 3 года назад +6

    Man, CY sounded scared af!

    • @RetroSpaceHD
      @RetroSpaceHD  3 года назад +4

      Indeed. You can see from the footage that the situation is serious.

  • @themocaw
    @themocaw 3 года назад +6

    Well, they won't need to do a structural integrity test on that plane.

  • @jamesfrangione8448
    @jamesfrangione8448 3 года назад +3

    Sounds harrowing. Yeager...balls of steel.

  • @michaelmcgovern8110
    @michaelmcgovern8110 3 месяца назад

    On 12 December 1953, Major Yeager flew the new rocket plane to 1,650 miles per hour (2,655 kilometers per hour), Mach 2.44, at 74,700 feet (22,769 meters). I looked it up.
    He fell from 75 to 25 thousand feet in HOW long?

  • @gafoot5368
    @gafoot5368 2 года назад +2

    Probably the only recording where Chuck Yeager sounds like he's scared stiff.

    • @RetroSpaceHD
      @RetroSpaceHD  2 года назад +1

      Indeed. After hearing this (and putting the footage together) I think it's incredible how he managed to recover from that situation!

    • @gafoot5368
      @gafoot5368 2 года назад +2

      @@RetroSpaceHD Only he could have pulled that off; Scott Crossfield said so.

  • @edwardpate6128
    @edwardpate6128 Год назад +1

    Man the sky sure is dark up that high!

  • @pasodeminick
    @pasodeminick 9 месяцев назад

    Step into prototypes, push them to the limit, try to control and solve any situation, keep calm while you break the G-meter.
    Balls of steel.

  • @timsparks1858
    @timsparks1858 10 месяцев назад

    Interesting that in 1953 the X-1A had straight wings instead of swept. 10 years later almost to the day Yeager does NF-104A altitude flight.

  • @maxwellwalcher1441
    @maxwellwalcher1441 3 года назад +4

    cool ready for Apollo 11 launch please.

  • @PhilipBooth-qj9dk
    @PhilipBooth-qj9dk 7 месяцев назад

    October 14th 1947. RIP Mr Yeager.

  • @jeffreylindsey1757
    @jeffreylindsey1757 Месяц назад

    Big brass ones and was the Right stuff, no doubt! Godspeed Chuck.

  • @arcadeages3917
    @arcadeages3917 Год назад +1

    When Chuck says that he has 1800 lbs nitrogen source pressure, I assume he’s referring to his G-SUIT? Can anyone explain this?

    • @billofrightsamend4
      @billofrightsamend4 Год назад

      Maybe he's talking about the fuel for the jet, because it had to burn at high altitudes. The space rockets used nitrous oxide?? Maybe it had some sort of fuel injector??

    • @rfletch62
      @rfletch62 Год назад +1

      Likely the reaction control thrusters. The air is too thin for wings to work up there. Thrusters for roll, pitch, yaw. As if the ship was in space.

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 11 месяцев назад

      The rocket motors were liquid fueled. To pump the fuel into the combustion chamber, high pressure nitrogen gas ran a turbine.

    • @davidbaro4834
      @davidbaro4834 27 дней назад

      I believe the nitrogen ran some of the flight controls, at least on the X-1. So maybe his concern was whether he had enough pressure left after so much maneuvering to regain control ?

  • @michaelmcgovern8110
    @michaelmcgovern8110 3 месяца назад

    4:12 - what do YOU hear:
    [chuckling]"I think you'll have to run a structural demonstratin' on this damn thing."

    • @SingaporeSkaterSam
      @SingaporeSkaterSam 3 месяца назад

      “I don’t think you’ll have to run a structure demonstration on this damned thing!”
      Per official transcript

  • @privateer0561
    @privateer0561 Год назад

    Extra structure was required to accommodate Yeager's iron balls.

  • @earlturner8174
    @earlturner8174 10 дней назад

    Many of the comments have described General Yeager’s balls as brass, iron, steel or even titanium. Can we come to a consensus on this? Titanium balls would be the most appropriate since they are stronger and lighter than steel.

  • @billofrightsamend4
    @billofrightsamend4 Год назад

    They can't talk, they're bearing down to keep from passing out from hypoxia. The g forces pool the blood to your lower extremities. He sounds calm and cool to me, but he does express that he doesn't want to get back in that plane.

  • @carlosbrites8201
    @carlosbrites8201 2 года назад

    QEPD,CHUCK.

  • @campbellmays9900
    @campbellmays9900 Год назад

    Today I learned this wasn’t just made up for The Right Stuff movie

  • @kennethruehl8299
    @kennethruehl8299 5 месяцев назад

    So surreal
    Seriously

  • @betterthanyou3145
    @betterthanyou3145 2 года назад

    Imagine going 30 mph in your car and slamming in the breaks. It’s not fun. Now imagine going around 1400 mph and that happening , expect your being slammed in every direction over and over again. Scott cross field was an arrogant bastard and not to fond of Yeager, but when I read his book, even he said “we all listened to it to it on the squawk box and cheered the master on”

    • @ted3020
      @ted3020 2 года назад

      Several years ago at Oshkosh, they were honoring Scott Crossfield. Someone asked Yeager if Scott was a good pilot and he said - no. Yeager always gave his opinion to every question..

    • @jimshoe402
      @jimshoe402 2 года назад

      @@ted3020 TOOOO many Risks that's why he Died. Read up

  • @RAINBOW24S
    @RAINBOW24S Год назад

    Edith Ione Yeager was her birth name

  • @1987VCRProductions
    @1987VCRProductions 3 года назад +8

    He would have made a great astronaut.

    • @tomt373
      @tomt373 2 года назад +2

      I think the USAF was afraid they might have lost their best test pilot to some NASA screw-up.

    • @VernCrisler
      @VernCrisler 2 года назад +1

      Apparently, he didn't fit the profile. Bureaucracy for you.

    • @jimshoe402
      @jimshoe402 2 года назад

      @@VernCrisler CORRECT no COLLEGE ..

    • @shawnmclean7932
      @shawnmclean7932 Год назад

      Spam in a can.

  • @jakobwooten4328
    @jakobwooten4328 2 года назад

    yeah

  • @RAINBOW24S
    @RAINBOW24S Год назад

    He is the cousin of my grandmother Edith Ione Posey

  • @guitarshredddddder91
    @guitarshredddddder91 9 месяцев назад

    Lockheed always built a good aircraft.
    Kudos for bringing another Hero back home

    • @stevetobe4494
      @stevetobe4494 3 месяца назад

      The X-1A was made by Bell.

    • @guitarshredddddder91
      @guitarshredddddder91 3 месяца назад +1

      @@stevetobe4494 Bell is owned by Textron Inc. & is a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin's Sikorsky.
      So, ya
      I'd like to thank you for playing.
      🙏👍

    • @stevetobe4494
      @stevetobe4494 3 месяца назад

      @@guitarshredddddder91 Not back then.

    • @guitarshredddddder91
      @guitarshredddddder91 3 месяца назад

      @@stevetobe4494 we don't live back then.

    • @stevetobe4494
      @stevetobe4494 3 месяца назад

      @@guitarshredddddder91 It was strictly a Bell Aircraft design back then and Lockheed had nothing to do with it.

  • @blackproject5677
    @blackproject5677 3 года назад +1

    Pro.....

  • @airplanes42
    @airplanes42 8 месяцев назад +1

    Yeager almost destroying another program (like the NF104) by chasing another record and contributing nothing to research.....

    • @greebel1
      @greebel1 7 месяцев назад +1

      That's actually not true. It was not a personal grudge match. Yeager didn't just up and decide he needed to break Crossfields record, the govt program now knowing Mach 2 was possible, wanted to see how much faster they can keep going. And at every step of the way, once proven for the first time, other pilots and engineers can be taught from it. And then their job is push it more. What else is capable. The x1a was designed to go faster the Mach. 2. And one problem at those speeds is intetia coupling. Which killed another great Edward's AF pilot at the time, Mel Apt. It was a phenomenon at those speeds and there wasn't a solution to overcome it. Yeagers accident wound up proving it could be overcome. So new pilots and new planes could be built to try and test how best to overcome IC.

    • @jaykay6387
      @jaykay6387 2 месяца назад

      @@greebel1 The truth is probably someplace in the middle. I read Yeager's autobiography, and he even admits that at least part of the reason he did this was to show up NACA(the forerunner to NASA) that were the first to break Mach 2, which had just been achieved by Crossfield(flying for NACA). He even dubbed it "Operation NACA Weep". His plan was to go beyond Mach 2 as a way to embarrass NACA, who had planned to hold some kind of ceremony to celebrate achieving Mach 2.

  • @ludwigsamereier8204
    @ludwigsamereier8204 Год назад

    To hell with that annoying music!!!

  • @BigWheelHawaii
    @BigWheelHawaii Месяц назад

    First Book I Read,,, "God Is My Copilot",,, Chuck Had a Great "Copilot",,, This Day... What a MASTER of COURAGE...