Posted on 10/13/2017 1:18:57 AM PDT by LibWhacker
Click here to drag and click
and look around the cockpit.
n the morning of October 14, 1947, U.S. Air Force Capt. Charles E. Chuck Yeager made humankinds first supersonic flight in the bullet-shaped Bell X-1 aircraft he nicknamed Glamorous Glennis, after his wife.
That aircraft now hangs in the Boeing Milestones of Flight hall in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.
This 360-degree VR view is part of a series of aircraft cockpits photographed for the Museum by Dennis Biela of LightSpeed Media. Click and drag anywhere inside the frame to look around inside the cockpit. To see it full-screen, click the symbol in the lower right corner of the frame.
Things to note as you explore the X-1 cockpit:
The distinct H-shaped yoke determined both roll and pitch. Airspeed was controlled by the number of rocket chambersup to fourfired by the silver thumb-switch to the left of the yoke; there was no throttle.
The Mach indicator above goes to Mach 1.5; it was most likely installed after Yeagers first transonic flight. Its flanked by a conventional altimeter and airspeed indicator. The fastest Glamorous Glennis ever flew was Mach 1.45.
Yeager signed his name in the cockpit of Glamorous Glennis on many occasions over the decades. (He piloted 33 of the aircrafts 78 career test flights, including its last, on May 12, 1950.) Can you find all his signatures?
My thoughts exactly ..... was looking for the broomstick as well .....
working right now
i mean it won’t load on my machine...
This site cant provide a secure connection
360player.io uses an unsupported protocol.
The client and server don’t support a common SSL protocol version or cipher suite. This is likely to be caused when the server needs RC4, which is no longer considered secure.
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