Test Pilot - Notable Test Pilots

Notable Test Pilots

Some notable test pilots include:

  • Charles E. 'Chuck' Yeager, Brigadier General, USAF - WWII fighter ace and test pilot at the USAF Flight Test Center at Edwards AFB, Muroc, CA. On October 14, 1947, Yeager became the first test pilot to successfully break the Sound Barrier flying the Bell X-1 test aircraft.
  • Neil Armstrong, X-15 pilot and first man to walk on the moon.
  • Eric "Winkle" Brown, listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as having flown more aircraft types (487) than any other pilot in the world and first pilot to land a jet aircraft on an aircraft carrier, and also holds the world record for the most carrier landings.
  • Jeffrey Quill, British Royal Air Force officer and chief Test Pilot in charge of the development of the Supermarine Spitfire, who test-flew every mark of Spitfire from the prototype K5054 until the end of the aircraft's production, and also saw action in the Battle of Britain.
  • Roland Beamont - for English Electric and BAC flew the Canberra and Lightning and was the first pilot to make a double Atlantic crossing by jet.
  • Bill Bedford - for Hawker Aircraft flew the Hawker P.1127 & Kestrel and later Harrier VTOL jet aircraft.
  • Charles F. Bolden, Jr. became the administrator of NASA on July 17, 2009. He is a former a naval test pilot, a former NASA astronaut, and a retired United States Marine Corps major general.
  • Scott Crossfield, Yeager's direct rival and the first pilot known to have reached Mach 2.
  • John Derry, for de Havilland the first Briton to exceed the speed of sound. He was killed in the 1952 Farnborough Airshow DH.110 crash where his aircraft broke up.
  • Heini Dittmar, the first pilot to ever hold any sort of airspeed record, unofficial or otherwise, while flying a rocket powered fixed-wing aircraft (Messerschmitt Me 163A and B-series prototypes) at 1004 km/h (624 mph) in 1941, and 1130 km/h (702 mph) in 1944.
  • Neville Duke - World War two fighter ace, holder of airspeed record, Chief Test Pilot for Hawker.
  • Boone Guyton - World War II test pilot at Chance-Vought, best known for participation in development of the F4U Corsair, also tested SB2U Vindicator, OS2U Kingfisher, Vought V-173 flying pancake, F6U Pirate, and F7U Cutlass.
  • Geoffrey de Havilland, Jr. - for de Havilland flew the Mosquito and Vampire, killed in the near supersonic de Havilland DH 108. His two brothers were also test pilots. John was killed in a mid-air collision in 1943.
  • John Cunningham, test-pilot before and after RAF service during World War II. Test-piloted the world's first jet airliner, the de Havilland Comet. de Havillands chief test pilot after Geoffrey's death.
  • Harry Hawker, aviation pioneer pre-World War I and Sopwith Aviation Company chief test pilot.
  • Bill Humble, British test pilot who first flew the first Hawker Tempest V, JN729 on 21 June 1943.
  • Howard Hughes - Notable for test piloting aircraft produced by his company, Hughes Aircraft, and bought by his airline, TWA. Broke the World Land Plane Speed Record in 1935 and test flew the world's largest airplane, the Spruce Goose, in 1947. Both aircraft were of his own design.
  • "Tex" Johnston, who piloted the Boeing 707 prototype,
  • Hans-Werner Lerche, German World War II test pilot, who flew 125 different aircraft including captured Allied aircraft to assess their performance, as well as many German types.
  • Anthony W. "Tony" LeVier, air racer and test pilot for the Lockheed Corporation.
  • Mike Melvill, first privately funded pilot in space. Winner of the Kinchloe award
  • Alfred "Paul" Metz, chief test pilot of the Northrop/McDonnell Douglas Advanced Tactical Fighter YF-23A Black Widow II, receiving the Iven C. Kincheloe Award for his work on the ATF, and later chief test pilot of the first Lockheed/Boeing/General Dynamics F-22 Raptor (Raptor 4001), piloting the first flight of each. Member and past president of the Society of Experimental Test Pilots.
  • Tom Morgenfeld, chief test pilot for Lockheed Martin's Skunk works and the Joint Strike Fighter.
  • John Lankester Parker, British test pilot and Chief Test Pilot for Short Brothers, the world's first aircraft manufacturing company, from 1916 until 1945. During this time he flew every Shorts aircraft type, i.e. including the Short Sunderland and the Short Stirling, on its maiden test flight.
  • Marina Popovich, female Russian test pilot who set 107 world records in aviation.
  • Hanna Reitsch, the German female test pilot of the V-1 flying bomb program, especially its manned version.
  • Ewald Rohlfs of Germany, who made the first flight of a helicopter, the Focke-Wulf Fw 61.
  • Flt Lt Gerry Sayer (RAF), test pilot of Britain's first jet aircraft, Sir Frank Whittle's Gloster E.28/39, in 1941.
  • Joseph "Mutt" Summers - chief test pilot at Vickers-Armstrong and holds the highest number of "prototype first flights". He also holds the highest number of flying hours of any test pilot (5600).
  • Andre Turcat first test pilot to fly Concorde
  • Brian Trubshaw for Vickers-Armstrongs and then British Aircraft Corporation, test pilot on Concorde,
  • Joe Walker, X-15 pilot, first to reach the internationally-recognized boundary to space in a spaceplane.
  • Erich Warsitz, the first man to fly an aircraft under turbojet power, the Heinkel He 178, on August 27, 1939.
  • George Welch, a test pilot for North American Aviation, whom some believe broke the sound barrier before Yeager.
  • Fritz Wendel, Messerschmitt's chief test pilot, who broke the world piston-engined speed record with the Messerschmitt Me 209 V1 in 1939 and first flew the Messerschmitt 262, the world's first operational jet fighter.
  • Janusz Żurakowski- postwar test pilot for Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment at Boscombe Down, test pilot for Gloster Aircraft company and Avro Aircraft Ltd., flew Gloster Meteor, Gloster Javelin and Avro CF-105 Arrow among others.
  • Alexey Perelet, test pilot, first to lift several Tupolev planes including Tu-4 and TU-95 Bear. Killed during Tu-95/1 plane crash May 11, 1953.

Awards made to notable test pilots include the international Iven C. Kincheloe Award made by the Society of Experimental Test Pilots.

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