The
Douglas Skyrocket (
D-558-2 or
D-558-II) was a rocket and jet-powered supersonic
research aircraft built by the
Douglas Aircraft Company for the
United States Navy. On 20
November 1953, shortly before the 50th anniversary of powered
flight,
Scott Crossfield
piloted the Douglas D-558-2 Skyrocket to Mach 2, or more than
1,290 mph (2076 km/h), the first time an aircraft had
exceeded twice the speed of sound.
Design and development
The "-2" in the aircraft's designation referred to the fact that
the Skyrocket was the phase-two version of what had originally been
conceived as a three-phase program. The phase-one aircraft, the
D-558-1, was jet powered and had
straight wings. The third phase, which never came to fruition,
would have involved constructing a
mock-up
of a combat type aircraft embodying the results from the testing of
the phase one and two aircraft. The eventual
D-558-3 design, which was never built, was
for a hypersonic aircraft similar to the
North American X-15..
When it became obvious that the D558-1 fuselage could not be
modified to accommodate both rocket and jet power, the D558-2 was
conceived as an entirely different aircraft. A contract change
order was issued on 27 January 1947 to formally drop the final
three D558-1 aircraft and substitute three new D558-2 aircraft
instead.
The Skyrocket featured wings with a 35-degree sweep and horizontal
stabilizers with 40-degree sweep. The wings and empennage were
fabricated from aluminum and the large fuselage was of primarily
magnesium construction. The Skyrocket was powered by a
Westinghouse J34-40 turbojet engine fed through side
intakes in the forward fuselage. This engine was intended for
takeoff, climb and landing. For high speed flight, a four-chamber
Reaction Motors LR8-RM-6 engine (the
Navy designation for the Air Force's
XLR-11 used in the
Bell X-1), was fitted. This engine was rated at
6,000 lbf (27 kN) static thrust at sea level. A total of
250 gallons (946 liters) of aviation fuel, 195 gallons of alcohol,
and 180 gallons of liquid oxygen were carried in fuselage
tanks.
The Skyrocket was configured with a flush cockpit canopy, but
visibility from the cockpit was poor, so it was re-configured with
a raised cockpit with conventional angled windows. This resulted in
a greater profile area at the front of the aircraft, which was
balanced by an additional 14 inches (36 cm) of height
added to the vertical stabilizer. Like its predecessor, the D558-1,
the D558-2 was designed so that the forward fuselage, including
cockpit, could be separated from the rest of the aircraft in an
emergency. Once the forward fuselage had decelerated sufficiently,
the pilot would then be able to escape from the cockpit by
parachute.
Operational history
Douglas
pilot John F. Martin made the first
flight at Muroc Army
Airfield
(later renamed Edwards Air Force Base
) in California on 4 February 1948 in an aircraft
equipped only with the jet engine. The goals of the program
were to investigate the characteristics of swept-wing aircraft at
transonic and supersonic speeds with particular attention to
pitch-up (un-commanded rotation of the nose of the aircraft
upwards), a problem prevalent in high-speed service aircraft of
that era, particularly at low speeds during takeoff and landing,
and in tight turns.
The three aircraft gathered a great deal of data about pitch-up and
the coupling of lateral (yaw) and longitudinal (pitch) motions;
wing and tail loads, lift, drag and
buffeting characteristics of swept-wing aircraft
at transonic and supersonic speeds; and the effects of the rocket
exhaust plume on lateral dynamic stability throughout the speed
range. (Plume effects were a new experience for aircraft.) The
number three aircraft also gathered information about the effects
of external stores (bomb shapes, drop tanks) upon the aircraft's
behavior in the transonic region (roughly 0.7 to 1.3 times the
speed of sound). In correlation with data from other early
transonic research aircraft such as the
XF-92A, this information contributed to solutions to
the pitch-up problem in swept-wing aircraft.
Its flight
research was done at the NACA's Muroc Flight Test Unit in California
, redesignated in 1949 the High-Speed Flight
Research Station (HSFRS). The HSFRS became the High-Speed Flight
Station in 1954 and is now known as the NASA
Dryden Flight
Research Center
.

The Douglas Skyrocket was dropped from
a Navy B-29
The three aircraft flew a total of 313 times – 23 by the number one
aircraft (Bureau No. 37973—NACA 143), 103 by the second Skyrocket
(Bureau No. 37974 – NACA 144), and 87 by aircraft number three
(Bureau No. 37975 – NACA 145). Skyrocket 143 flew all but one of
its missions as part of the Douglas contractor program to test the
aircraft's performance.
NACA aircraft 143 was initially powered by the jet engine only, but
was later fitted with the rocket engine. In this configuration, it
was tested by Douglas from 1949 to 1951. After Douglas' test
program, it was delivered to NACA, who stored it until 1954. In
1954-55 the contractor modified it to an all-rocket air-launch
capability with the jet engine removed. In this configuration, NACA
research pilot
John McKay flew the
aircraft only once for familiarization on 17 September 1956. The
123 flights of NACA 143 served to validate wind-tunnel predictions
of the aircraft's performance, except for the fact that the
aircraft experienced less drag above Mach 0.85 than the wind
tunnels had indicated.
NACA 144 also began its flight program with a turbojet powerplant.
NACA pilots
Robert A. Champine and
John H. Griffith flew 21 times in this
configuration to test airspeed calibrations and to research
longitudinal and lateral stability and control. In the process,
during August 1949 they encountered pitch-up problems, which NACA
engineers recognized as serious because they could produce a
limiting and dangerous restriction on flight performance. Hence,
they determined to make a complete investigation of the
problem.
In 1950, Douglas replaced the turbojet with an LR-8 rocket engine,
and its pilot,
Bill Bridgeman, flew
the aircraft seven times up to a speed of Mach 1.88 (1.88 times the
speed of sound) and an altitude of 79,494 ft (24,230 m), the
latter an unofficial world's altitude record at the time, achieved
on 15 August 1951. In the rocket configuration, a Navy P2B (Navy
version of the
B-29) launched the
aircraft at approximately after taking off from the ground with the
Skyrocket attached beneath its bomb bay. During Bridgeman's
supersonic flights, he encountered a violent rolling motion known
as lateral instability that was less pronounced on the Mach 1.88
flight on 7 August 1951, than on a Mach 1.85 flight in June when he
pushed over to a low angle of attack (angle of the fuselage or wing
to the prevailing wind direction).
The NACA engineers studied the behavior of the aircraft before
beginning their own flight research in the aircraft in September
1951. Over the next couple of years, NACA pilot
Scott Crossfield flew the aircraft
20 times to gather data on longitudinal and lateral stability and
control, wing and tail loads, and lift, drag, and buffeting
characteristics at speeds up to Mach 1.878.
At that point, Marine Lt. Col.
Marion
Carl flew the aircraft to a new (unofficial) altitude record of
83,235 feet (25,370 m) on 21 August 1953, and to a maximum speed of
Mach 1.728.
Following
Carl's completion of these flights for the Navy, NACA technicians
at the High-Speed Flight Research Station (HSFRS) near Mojave
, California, outfitted the LR-8 engine's cylinders
with nozzle extensions to prevent the exhaust gas from affecting
the rudders at supersonic speeds. This addition also
increased the engine's thrust by 6.5 percent at Mach 1.7 and 70,000
feet (21,300 m).
Even before Marion Carl had flown the Skyrocket, HSFRS Chief Walter
C. Williams had petitioned NACA headquarters unsuccessfully to fly
the aircraft to Mach 2 to garner the research data at that speed.
Finally, after Crossfield had secured the agreement of the Navy's
Bureau of Aeronautics, NACA director
Hugh L. Dryden relaxed the organization's usual
practice of leaving record setting to others and consented to
attempting a flight to Mach 2.
In addition to adding the nozzle extensions, the NACA flight team
at the HSFRS chilled the fuel (alcohol) so more could be poured
into the tank and waxed the fuselage to reduce drag. With these
preparations and employing a flight plan devised by project
engineer Herman O. Ankenbruck to fly to approximately 72,000 feet
(21,900 m) and push over into a slight dive, Crossfield made
aviation history on 20 November 1953, when he flew to Mach 2.005,
1,291 miles per hour (2,078 km/h). He became the first pilot
to reach Mach 2 in this, the only flight in which the Skyrocket
flew that fast.
Following this flight, Crossfield and NACA pilots
Joseph A. Walker and
John
B. McKay flew the aircraft for
such purposes as to gather data on pressure distribution,
structural loads, and structural heating, with the last flight in
the program occurring on 20 December 1956, when McKay obtained
dynamic stability data and sound-pressure levels at transonic
speeds and above.
Meanwhile, NACA 145 had completed 21 contractor flights by Douglas
pilots
Eugene F. May and William Bridgeman in November 1950. In
this jet-and-rocket-propelled craft, Scott Crossfield and Walter
Jones began the NACA's investigation of pitch-up lasting from
September 1951 well into summer 1953. They flew the Skyrocket with
a variety of wing-fence, wing-slat and leading edge chord extension
configurations, performing various maneuvers as well as
straight-and-level flying at transonic speeds. While fences
significantly aided recovery from pitch-up conditions, leading edge
chord extensions did not, disproving wind-tunnel tests to the
contrary. Slats (long, narrow auxiliary airfoils) in the fully open
position eliminated pitch-up except in the speed range around Mach
0.8 to 0.85.
In June 1954, Crossfield began an investigation of the effects of
external stores (bomb shapes and fuel tanks) upon the aircraft's
transonic behavior. McKay and
Stanley
Butchart completed the NACA's investigation of this issue, with
McKay flying the final mission on 28 August 1956.
Besides setting several records, the Skyrocket pilots had gathered
important data and understanding about what would and would not
work to provide stable, controlled flight of a swept-wing aircraft
in the transonic and supersonic flight regimes. The data they
gathered also helped to enable a better correlation of wind-tunnel
test results with actual flight values, enhancing the abilities of
designers to produce more capable aircraft for the armed services,
especially those with swept wings. Moreover, data on such matters
as stability and control from this and other early research
aircraft aided in the design of the
Century Series of fighter aircraft, all of
which featured the movable horizontal stabilizers first employed on
the X-1 and D-558 series.
Variants
All three of the Skyrockets had 35-degree swept wings.
Until configured for air launch, NACA 143 featured a Westinghouse
J-34-40 turbojet engine rated at 3,000 lb force (13 kN)
static thrust. It carried 260 U.S. gallons (980 l) of aviation
gasoline and weighed 10,572 lb (4,795 kg) at
takeoff.
NACA 144 (and NACA 143 after modification in 1955) was powered by
an LR-8-RM-6 rocket engine rated at 6,000 pounds force (27 kN)
static thrust. Its propellants were 345 U.S. gallons (1,306 l) of
liquid oxygen and 378 US gallons (1,431 l) of diluted ethyl
alcohol. In its launch configuration, it weighed 15,787 lb
(7,161 kg).
NACA 145 had both an LR-8-RM-5 rocket engine rated at 6,000 lb
force (27 kN) static thrust and featured a Westinghouse
J-34-40 turbojet engine rated at 3,000 lb force (13 kN)
static thrust. It carried 170 U.S. gallons (644 l) of liquid
oxygen, 192 U.S. gallons (727 l) of diluted ethyl alcohol, and 260
U.S. gallons (984 l) of aviation gasoline for a launch weight of
15,266 lb (6,925 kg).
Aircraft serial numbers
- D-558-2 Skyrocket
- D-558-2 #1 - #37973 NACA-143, 123 flights
- D-558-2 #2 - #37974 NACA-144, 103 flights
- D-558-2 #3 - #37975 NACA-145, 87 flights
Locations today
D-558-2 #1
Skyrocket is on display at the Planes of Fame Museum
, Chino, California
. The number two Skyrocket, the first aircraft
to fly Mach 2, is on display at the National Air and
Space Museum
in Washington D.C.
The number three is displayed on a pedestal
at Antelope
Valley College
, Lancaster
, California.
Specifications (D-558-2 Skyrocket)
(Configured with mixed propulsion)
See also
References
- Notes
- Hunley, J.D., ed. "Toward Mach 2: The Douglas D558 Program (NASA
SP-4222)." Washington, DC: National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, 1999.
- "D-558-II Fact Sheet." Dryden Flight
Research Center. Retrieved: 12 October 2009.
- Francillon, René J. McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Since 1920:
Volume I. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1988. ISBN
0-87021-428-4.
- Heinemann, Edward H. and Rosario Rausa. Ed Heinemann:
Combat Aircraft Designer. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute
Press, 1980. ISBN 0-87021-797-6.
- Bibliography
- Bridgeman, William and Jacqueline Hazard. The Lonely
Sky. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1955. ISBN
978-0-8107-9011-7.
- Hallion, Dr. Richard P. "Saga of the Rocket Ships"
AirEnthusiast Five November 1977-February 1978. Bromley,
Kent, UK: Pilot Press Ltd., 1977.
- Libis, Scott. Douglas D-558-2 Skyrocket (Naval
Fighters Number Fifty-Seven). Simi Valley, California: Ginter
Books, 2002. ISBN 0-94261-257-4.
- Libis, Scott. Skystreak, Skyrocket, & Stiletto: Douglas
High-Speed X-Planes. North Branch, MN: Specialty Press, 2005.
ISBN 1-58007-084-1.
External links