[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 158 (Tuesday, October 3, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H7677]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
A NEW ABSOLUTE AIRSPEED RECORD
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
California (Mr. Knight) for 5 minutes.
Mr. KNIGHT. Madam Speaker, I am truly blessed to represent a district
in southern California that is the home of so many historic feats.
Today, I would like to tell you about one of those feats that turned
50 years old today. October 3, 1967, is a date I will never forget, but
it is probably a date I will never remember either because I was 9
months old.
On that date, a B-52 flew down the runway of Edwards Air Force Base
with a small, white airplane tucked underneath her wing. A major who
had thousands of hours in different platforms was the pilot of that
airplane. He had been on several different programs and had been a test
pilot for many years and was a graduate of the United States Air Force
Test Pilot School. He was the pilot of that small, white aircraft.
The plan was simple on paper. It was to accelerate to 100,000 feet
and achieve a Mach of 6.50. As the pilots at Edwards Air Force Base
will also tell you, it is a profession that they go about, and they do
this in a very professional manner. The terms were 100,000 feet and
6.50, the ending was 102,100 feet and 6.72--a new airspeed record.
{time} 1015
The interesting thing about this is that the air speed record had
been set on November 18, 1966, by the same pilot and broken just 10
months later. That flight has now stood for 50 years.
If that pilot was here today, he would say that it is a travesty that
that air speed record has stood for 50 years. In fact, I was standing
with him on the 30th anniversary and he said just those same words: Why
are we stuck where we were in the sixties? Why haven't we continued to
push forward?
I believe he was right and I believe he would be right today. I hope
that I am not standing here on the 60th anniversary talking about the
same issue.
The great men of that era did some phenomenal things. They pushed the
limits. They knew that the sky was no limit and that it was actually
just a boundary that we needed to push forward.
There were 12 pilots in the X-15 program. I grew up with many of them
or their kids. There was General Rushworth, Neil Armstrong, Bob White,
Joe Walker, Bill Dana, Joe Engle, Scott Crossfield, John McKay, Milton
Thompson, and Forrest Petersen. Mike Adams lost his life in the X-15
program in November 1967--the only one to lose his life in that
program.
The pilot of the October 3, 1967, flight was my father, Pete Knight.
He flew the aircraft 16 times, setting the air speed record several
times, breaking it, and then achieving 4,520 miles an hour on October
3, 1967, which still stands today.
I think the lesson is that we have got to keep pushing. Technology is
not out there for no reason. It is out there for us to grab and
continue to achieve. Those records are made to be broken. We must
continue to push in aerospace and in every endeavor we encounter. That
is what America does and that is what we do for all of mankind.
I think this record was a great achievement, and I can tell you one
quick story. I knew of this record when I was a small kid because my
father pulled that Machmeter out of the X-15 after he set the record.
That Machmeter sat on our television for every year of my life, until
he was on his death bed. He said: I want that Machmeter to go to the
Smithsonian. Which is exactly where we sent it.
This was something that was an achievement by many engineers, pilots,
mothership pilots, and chase pilots, but it is something that is now 50
years old, and we need to continue to push.
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