
| Wingspan | 28 ft. |
| Length | 30.9 ft. |
| Height | 10.85 ft. |
| Weight | 7,000 lb empty |
Bell X-1 "Glamorous Glennis"
| On October 14, 1947, flying the Bell XS-1
#1, Capt. Charles ''Chuck' Yeager, USAF, became the first pilot to
fly faster than sound. The XS-1, later designated X-l, reached Mach
1.06, 700 mph, at an altitude of 43,000 feet, over the Mojave Desert
near Muroc Dry Lake, California. The flight demonstrated that
aircraft could be designed to fly faster than sound, and the concept
of a ‘sound barrier" crumbled into myth. The XS-1 was developed as part of a cooperative program initiated in 1944 by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) and the U.S. Army Air Forces (later the U.S. Air Force) to develop special manned transonic and supersonic research aircraft. On March 16, 1945, the Army Air Technical Service Command awarded the Bell Aircraft Corporation of Buffalo, New York, a contract to develop three transonic and supersonic research aircraft under project designation MX-653. The Army assigned the designation XS-1 for Experimental Sonic-i. Bell Aircraft built three rocket-powered XS-1 aircraft. |
| The two XS-1 aircraft were constructed
from high-strength aluminum, with propellant tanks fabricated from
steel. The first two XS-1 aircraft did not utilize turbopumps for
fuel feed to the rocket engine, relying instead on direct nitrogen
pressurization of the fuel-feed system. The smooth contours of the
XS-1, patterned on the lines of a .50-caliber machine gun bullet,
masked an extremely crowded fuselage containing two propellant
tanks, twelve nitrogen spheres for fuel and cabin pressurization,
the pilot’s pressurized cockpit, three pressure regulators, a
retractable landing gear, the wing carry-through structure, a
Reaction Motors, Inc., 6.000-pound-thrust rocket engine, and more
than five hundred pounds of special flight-test instrumentation. Though originally designed for conventional ground takeoffs, all X-1 aircraft were air-launched from the Boeing B-29 Superfortress. |
**Information on Bell X1 found on Smithsonian Air and Space museum website.