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In 1969, after his return from Vietnam, George Marrett took a job as a test pilot at Hughes Aircraft. For twenty years, he tested the most sophisticated airborne radar and missiles ever designed for advanced Navy and Air Force aircraft. Marrett's masterful command of storytelling puts the reader in the cockpit during the F-15, F-16, and F-18 weapons systems flyoff, as well as during the firing of a Mach 3 Phoenix missile from an F-14A Tomcat at a Soviet MiG Foxbat target. In addition to the weaponry, Marrett relives stories of espionage, deadly crashes, and the development of the B-2 Spirit stealth bomber radar. He combines the thrill of test flying with the pathos, humor, and tragedy that is the everyday life of a test pilot, showing how the Cold War was actually won in the skies above Southern California. The background to Marrett's tale is the story of Hughes Aircraft. While Howard Hughes's huge and unwieldy Spruce Goose never made it into World War II, the Radio Department he started grew to become the electronics giant Hughes Aircraft Company. By the 1950s, Hughes Aircraft built airborne radar and missiles for all of the Air Force interceptors stationed on the East and West Coasts and along the border with Canada to defend the United States from Soviet bombers. In the years that followed, the company built airborne radar for the Navy F-14A Tomcat, the Air Force F-15A Eagle, the Navy F-18A Hornet and the B-2 stealth bomber. They also built the Navy air-to-air AIM-54 Phenix and the Air Force air-to-ground AGM-65 Maverick missiles. These advanced electronic weapons were developed and fielded during President Reagan's massive buildup of military might. Even though Hughes himself didnot live to see the Berlin Wall fall in 1989, the company he built made an essential contribution to the collapse of communism.
They flew low and slow, at treetop level, at night, in monsoons,
and in point-blank range of enemy guns and missiles. They were
missions no one else wanted, but the ones all other pilots prayed
for when shot down. Flying the World War II-vintage Douglas A-1
Skyraider, a single-engine, propeller-driven relic in a war of
"fast-movers," these intrepid US Air Force pilots, call sign Sandy,
risked their lives with every mission to rescue thousands of downed
Navy and Air Force pilots.
"In Contrails over the Mojave" George Marrett takes off where Tom
Wolfe's "The Right Stuff" ended in 1963. Marrett started the Air
Force Test Pilot School at Edwards AFB only two weeks after the
school's commander, Col. Chuck Yeager, ejected from a Lockheed
NF-104 trying to set a world altitude record. He describes life as
a space cadet experiencing 15 Gs in a human centrifuge, zero-G
maneuvers in a KC-135 "Vomit Comet," and a flight to 80,000 feet in
the F-104A Starfighter. After graduating from Yeager's "Charm
School," he was assigned to the Fighter Branch of Flight Test
Operations, where he flew the latest fighter aircraft and chased
other test aircraft as they set world speed and altitude records.
Marrett takes readers into the cockpit as he "goes vertical" in
a T-38 Talon, completes high-G maneuvers in an F-4C Phantom, and
conducts wet-runway landing tests in the accident-prone F-111A
Aardvark. He writes about Col. "Silver Fox" Stephens setting a
world speed record in the YF-12 Blackbird and Bob Gilliland testing
speed stalls in the SR-71 spy plane, but he also relives stories of
crashes that killed test pilot friends. He recounts dead-sticking a
T-38 to a landing on Rogers Dry Lake after a twin-engine failure
and conducting dangerous tail hook barrier testing in a fighter jet
without a canopy. A mysterious UFO sighting in the night sky above
the Mojave Desert, known as "The Edwards Encounter," also receives
Marrett's attention. Whether the author is assessing a new
aircraft's performance or describing the experiences of test pilots
as they routinely faced the possibility of death, this look at the
golden age of flight testing both thrills and informs.
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