Joe Engle Astronaut

April 29, 2022
Joe Engle Recalls the Legacy

On June 29, 1965, U.S. Air Force pilot Joe Engle qualified as an astronaut, though he wouldn’t join NASA’s astronaut corps for another nine months. That Tuesday morning, Engle flew the X-15 rocket plane to a peak altitude of 280, 600 feet or 53.1 miles, 3.1 miles beyond the threshold of where air ends and space begins. Last weekend he was inducted into the International Air & Space Hall of Fame at the San Diego Air & Space Museum, and I got to sit down and chat with him about flying that tiny, awesome rocket plane.

A Little About the X-15

Conceived in the early 1950s when airplanes were barely breaking Mach 2 or twice the speed of sound, the X-15 was a research aircraft designed to gather data on instability at speed up to Mach 7 and altitudes up to 50 miles. The first production aircraft rolled out of North American Aviation’s hangar in Los Angeles on October 15, 1958, and it looked every bit at space-aged as its high speed and high altitude flight profile suggested.

The X-15 really looks more like a missile than an aircraft. And really, it is sort of a missile with room for a pilot. It was even air launched from under the wing of a B-52 bomber like a missile. Fifty feet long, 13 feet high, and a wingspan measuring just 22 feet across, the bulk of the X-15’s fuselage was dedicated to anhydrous ammonia and liquid oxygen tanks and the plumbing needed to force both liquids into the powerful rear mounted XLR-99 rocket engine (though earlier flights used smaller, ethyl alcohol fueled XLR-11 engines).

Only the slight bump behind the nose with a narrow window indicated that a pilot was meant to sit inside.

But there’s one other piece of the X-15 that makes it a fascinating vehicle. Because it was designed to fly where the atmosphere is too thin for traditional flight controls — ailerons, elevators, and rudders — to bite into, the X-15 also had reaction controls. After burning his rocket engine on a steep climb to reach peak altitudes, small hydrogen peroxide jets gave the pilot a way to control his orientation in the nearly atmosphere-less environment.

Riding a Thoroughbred Horse

Learning to fly the X-15 was an incremental process, Engle said. The parts of the flight that used traditional flight controls called for classic piloting skill, using reaction controls in the upper atmosphere took some getting used to, and learning to fly a flight profile that combined traditional controls with reaction controls was a challenge. On one short flight, he had to use both control systems seamlessly. Simulators helped by replicating the flight down to jets that produced equivalent thrust in a hangar at Edwards Air Force Base as the X-15’s would 50 miles above the Earth. And the simulators were constantly updated with the latest flight data meaning it was an increasingly realistic representation of what the real thing would feel like.

And the flights were incremental, too. Engle’s first flight, like every X-15 pilot’s first flight, was a checkout flight. He only went Mach 4 and reached a peak altitude of just 77, 800 feet. Rather than records, the goal for this flight was for Engle to familiarize himself with the little aircraft and make the all-important unpowered landing on the dry lakebed at Edwards Air Force Base.

Engle went up in an X-15 nestled under the wing of a B-52 thirty-two times but only launched from the mothership 16 times. And not once was he rattled. Most of the aborted take offs were for innocuous things like communications or instrument problems.

And finding himself arcing over a flight path more than 250, 000 feet in the air didn’t rattle Engle’s nerves either.

Altitude flights treated X-15 pilots to a view of the curvature of the Earth and a brief period of weightlessness before gravity pulled the airplane back down to begin the high-speed descent. And while the view might have been breathtaking, Engle said it was more than anything an important flight instrument. The X-15 didn’t have an inertial guidance system. It used mechanical gyros that tended to drift with acceleration, so being able to look out the window and visually orient himself was more data and less scenery. There was too much to do on these short flights to really stop and take it all in.

But the view did, however briefly, highlight the reality of the task at hand. As Engle described it, to fly the X-15 meant bringing your A-game to work. Alone on top of the world, his life was quite literally in his own hands; no one but he could pilot that airplane seamlessly from atmosphere-less space to the lakebed. In that moment, he said, you had to be convinced that you’ve got the best hands in the world.

Taking In the View

Engle left the Air Force and joined NASA in March of 1966 as one of the Group 5 astronauts, and he was the first man to join the space program with astronaut wings. He trained to fly on Apollo 17 but was bumped from the crew when the last three lunar missions were cancelled. Suddenly, Apollo 17 was the last chance for a scientist to walk on the Moon and geologist Jack Schmitt was added to the crew. But Engle did make it into space. After returning to Edwards to fly approach and landing tests with the space shuttle Enterprise, he served as the commander of STS-2. On that flight, he told me, he finally had a chance to stop and take in the view of the Earth curving below him, a far better view than the brief glimpse at the top of an X-15 flight. On that mission, he manually flew the shuttle from Mach 25 to landing. From about Mach 6 on, he said, the shuttle handled more or less the same as the X-15, only it felt a lot bigger.

The X-15, Engle told me, was an exciting airplane to fly, akin to riding a high spirited thoroughbred horse. And it remains his favorite and most professionally rewarding of the 185 different types of planes he’s flown over the course of his career. And, I should point out, he couldn’t be nicer to sit down and talk to.

london travel restrictions london hughes london covid restrictions london johnson london gifts london quotes london kids shoes london queen london broil marinade london ohio london real estate for sale london bridge london pound cake london normandy house london elise kress london gbr london jewelers east hampton london ontario weather london fog drink london department stores blogging youtube channel name london ontario london england weather london nfl london jewelers london marathon london city london look uk london weather blogging alert xyz london pound cake strain london in spanish london england map london games london road rental london quarantine rules london ky zip code london rentals london on map london canada blogging your passion podcast london bridge is falling down london river name london to paris london lash london map london skyline london gatwick london laz london jobs london eye london uk weather london underground map blogging zelda london nails london fog luggage london metropolitan university london postal codes london phone number london in december london knights blogging about books london gold london tipton london ky restaurants zen cart blogging london newspapers london hotels london marathon 2022 london dry gin london pound mints strain london england time london ky london in january london square apartments london quarantine london restaurants london quick lube london brown london dispersion forces london marathon 2021 london heathrow explain xkcd blogging london breed blogging your book london to paris train blogging success zone london to edinburgh london irish london stock exchange london jeans brand blogging in zambia london latitude london house chicago blogging your way london airport code london dispersion london has fallen london tube map london elementary school london jewelry london king blogging in zimbabwe london house london system london kills london time london ontario canada london covid london road london isd london calling london population london on da track london neighborhoods london time zone blogging youtube london did you screw this london quiet room london stadium blogging your passion london uk london is falling blogging zarada london has fallen cast london local time london lazerson london eye tickets london quarantine requirements london school of economics london mule london landmarks london olympics london covid cases london soccer teams blogging your way to the front row london is in what country london news london population 2021 london museum london fog latte london daily mail blogging your way by holly becker london natural history museum london grammar london nfl games blogging zenith london fog london flag london opening london mayor london fog trench coat london fog jacket london jae london dungeon london real london jeans london broil london in november london house rooftop london ky weather london england london bridge arizona london chop house london plane tree london gallery london gb london review of books london broil recipe london square london urban dictionary blogging zones london fletcher london currency london quireboys london university london lazerson movies london underground xanga blogging
Source: www.popsci.com
RELATED VIDEO
AS-BD-6 Joe Engle Oral History SDASM
AS-BD-0006 Joe Engle Oral History SDASM
Astronaut Joe Engle -- X-15 Lecture at University of Kansas
Astronaut Joe Engle -- X-15 Lecture at University of Kansas
RELATED FACTS
Share this Post