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The games include Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer, Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer 2.0, and Chuck Yeager's Air Combat. The game manuals feature quotes and anecdotes from Yeager and were well received by players. Missions feature several of Yeager's accomplishments and let players challenge his records.
The X-1 aircraft #46-062, nicknamed Glamorous Glennis and flown by Chuck Yeager, was the first piloted airplane to exceed the speed of sound in level flight and was the first of the X-planes, a series of American experimental rocket planes (and non-rocket planes) designed for testing new technologies.
The third NF-104A (USAF 56-0762) was delivered to the USAF on 1 November 1963, and was destroyed in a crash while being piloted by Chuck Yeager on 10 December 1963. This accident was depicted in the book Yeager: An Autobiography, and the book and film adaptation of The Right Stuff. The aircraft used for filming was a standard F-104G flying with ...
A replica of Gen. Chuck Yeager’s P-51 Mustang WWII-era fighter plane, marked with Nazi flags indicating the number of planes shot down by Yeager, waits in 1999 to be lifted by crane atop a 46 ...
Chuck Yeager; Sound barrier; User:Durova/Featured picture gallery/2008; User talk:Durova/Archive 48; User talk:Durova/Archive 59; Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/February-2008; Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Yeager supersonic flight 1947.ogg; Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Vehicles/Air; Wikipedia:Featured pictures thumbs/10
On one occasion Chuck Yeager, former pilot of the X-15's predecessor X-plane the X-1, the first crewed craft to break the sound barrier, assisted as NB-52 co-pilot for an aborted flight. [9] X-15 pilots as of December 1965, left to right: Joe Engle, Bob Rushworth, John McKay, Pete Knight, Milt Thompson, and Bill Dana.
After retiring from the military in 1975, Yeager went on to serve as a consultant to the Air Force and defense companies. U.S. fighter pilot Charles "Chuck" Yeager has passed away at 97. Yeager ...
On October 14, 1947 the first individual flies faster than sound