Aces Wild: The Race for Mach 1
Autor Al Blackburnen Limba Engleză Hardback – noi 1998
One pilot, the more celebrated of the duo, is still alive today. Aces Wild also tells the story of the other aviator, George Welch, who lost his life in 1954 while once again flying beyond the technological wisdom of his day over the Mojave Desert. Aces Wild traces the story of fighter planes from the start of World War II at Pearl Harbor through the transition to jets in the 1950s. The author reveals the views of supersonic flight before and after 1947 by pilots, scientists, engineers, business interests, the government, and the media. This dramatic tale will appeal to aviation buffs and all readers, especially those who enjoyed Tom Wolfe's The Right Stuff.
Preț: 341.39 lei
Preț vechi: 434.96 lei
-22%
Puncte Express: 512
Preț estimativ în valută:
60.43€ • 70.19$ • 52.35£
60.43€ • 70.19$ • 52.35£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 02-16 martie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780842027328
ISBN-10: 0842027327
Pagini: 282
Dimensiuni: 170 x 233 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.67 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0842027327
Pagini: 282
Dimensiuni: 170 x 233 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.67 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1 Foresight: Before the First Real Ba-Boom
Chapter 2 The Challenge
Chapter 3 The Contenders
Chapter 4 A Tale of Two Aces
Chapter 5 Events, Markers, Milestones, and Records
Chapter 6 Hindsight: the Supersonic a Commonplace
Chapter 2 The Challenge
Chapter 3 The Contenders
Chapter 4 A Tale of Two Aces
Chapter 5 Events, Markers, Milestones, and Records
Chapter 6 Hindsight: the Supersonic a Commonplace
Recenzii
Move over, Chuck Yeager. Take note, Tom Wolfe. Al Blackburn, an aeronautical engineer and former test pilot, says that George Welch belongs atop the ziggurat of the right stuff. The case is circumstantial but persuasive, filled with wonderful yarns.
Al Blackburn, a scrappy survivor of the legendary mid-century roster of top-rank test pilots, has put together a rememberance of his world that is full of intriguing surprises. Not least is his thesis that Chuck Yeager may not have been the first person to make a supersonic flight. This is a story with much wider implications than whether Yeager or George Welch deserves the accolades for initially penetrating the sound barrier. And it's told in a style that neatly blends gripping and colorful anecdotal sequences with technical explanations that lend the account a high degree of authenticity.
A dramatic and historically accurate story.
Fascinating.
Sure to stir debate.
A new voice has been added to the ranks of the great aviation writers.
A very interesting book recording how it was and who did what and to whom during the race to achieve manned supersonic flight.
Aces Wild does far more than simply entertain or inform. It thrills, it inspires, and it enlightens. Al Blackburn takes the reader on the wild ride to do what many had thought impossible: exceed the speed of sound. He introduces us to a myriad of unique characters, those free spirits who defied the conventional wisdom and pushed the performance envelope beyond reasonable limits of safety.
Aces Wild is a very readable and highly personal story of the growth in fight-testing history between adolescence and maturity, cowboys and engineers, manual and automated, fighter jocks and a new breed of scholarly test pilots (Blackburn being one).
Blackie's love for flying comes through on every page. This book should appeal to all others who share that love. But it will be of even greater interest to those who appreciate the role that aviation has come to play in the modern world.
Simply superb! Aces Wild will set off a fire storm of argument as the case is made for the very real possibility that George 'Wheaties' Welch went supersonic in the XP-86 before Chuck Yeager's epic October 14, 1947, flight.
Al Blackburn, a scrappy survivor of the legendary mid-century roster of top-rank test pilots, has put together a rememberance of his world that is full of intriguing surprises. Not least is his thesis that Chuck Yeager may not have been the first person to make a supersonic flight. This is a story with much wider implications than whether Yeager or George Welch deserves the accolades for initially penetrating the sound barrier. And it's told in a style that neatly blends gripping and colorful anecdotal sequences with technical explanations that lend the account a high degree of authenticity.
A dramatic and historically accurate story.
Fascinating.
Sure to stir debate.
A new voice has been added to the ranks of the great aviation writers.
A very interesting book recording how it was and who did what and to whom during the race to achieve manned supersonic flight.
Aces Wild does far more than simply entertain or inform. It thrills, it inspires, and it enlightens. Al Blackburn takes the reader on the wild ride to do what many had thought impossible: exceed the speed of sound. He introduces us to a myriad of unique characters, those free spirits who defied the conventional wisdom and pushed the performance envelope beyond reasonable limits of safety.
Aces Wild is a very readable and highly personal story of the growth in fight-testing history between adolescence and maturity, cowboys and engineers, manual and automated, fighter jocks and a new breed of scholarly test pilots (Blackburn being one).
Blackie's love for flying comes through on every page. This book should appeal to all others who share that love. But it will be of even greater interest to those who appreciate the role that aviation has come to play in the modern world.
Simply superb! Aces Wild will set off a fire storm of argument as the case is made for the very real possibility that George 'Wheaties' Welch went supersonic in the XP-86 before Chuck Yeager's epic October 14, 1947, flight.