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Wingless Flight tells the story of the most unusual flying machines
ever flown, the lifting bodies. It is my story about my friends and
colleagues who committed a significant part of their lives in the
1960s and 1970s to prove that the concept was a viable one for use
in spacecraft of the future. This story, filled with drama and
adventure, is about the twelve-year period from 1963 to 1975 in
which eight different lifting-body configurations flew. It is
appropriate for me to write the story, since I was the engineer who
first presented the idea of flight-testing the concept to others at
the NASA Flight Research Center. Over those twelve years, I
experienced the story as it unfolded day by day at that remote NASA
facility northeast of Los Angeles in the bleak Mojave Desert.
Benefits from this effort immediately influenced the design and
operational concepts of the winged NASA Shuttle Orbiter. However,
the full benefits would not be realized until the 1990s when new
spacecraft such as the X-33 and X-38 would fully employ the
lifting-body concept. A lifting body is basically a wingless
vehicle that flies due to the lift generated by the shape of its
fuselage. Although both a lifting reentry vehicle and a ballistic
capsule had been considered as options during the early stages of
NASA's space program, NASA initially opted to go with the capsule.
A number of individuals were not content to close the book on the
lifting-body concept. Researchers including Alfred Eggers at the
NASA Ames Research Center conducted early wind-tunnel experiments,
finding that half of a rounded nose-cone shape that was flat on top
and rounded on the bottom could generate a lift-to-drag ratio of
about 1.5 to 1.Eggers' preliminary design sketch later resembled
the basic M2 lifting-body design. At the NASA Langley Research
Center, other researchers toyed with their own lifting-body shapes.
General Chuck Yeager, the greatest test pilot of them all -- the first man to fly faster than the speed of sound . . .the World War II flying ace who shot down a Messerschmitt jet with a prop-driven P-51 Mustang . . .the hero who defined a certain quality that all hotshot fly-boys of the postwar era aimed to achieve: the right stuff.
Now Chuck Yeager tells his whole incredible life story with the same "wide-open, full throttle" approach that has marked his astonishing career. What it was really like enaging in do-or-die dogfights over Nazi Europe. How after being shot over occupied France, Yeager somehow managed to escape. The amazing behind-the-scenes story of smashing the sound barrier despite cracked ribs from a riding accident days before.
The entire story is here, in Yeager's own words, and in wondeful insights from his wife and those friends and colleagues who have known him best. It is the personal and public story of a man who settled for nothing less than excellence, a one-of-a-kind portrait of a true American hero.
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