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"We had to make contact at .1 foot per second," said Gibson. "Much faster and we'd break something. Too slow and the latches wouldn't capture. I brought Atlantis in at .107."
The Mir docking mission would be his last shuttle flight. Gibson served as the shuttle program's deputy director of flight operations for a while, but "I really wanted to get back to flying," he said, and his wife wanted to move to Murfreesboro, where she'd grown up. Gibson retired from NASA and went to work flying as first officer for Southwest Airlines, a job with a reasonable commute.
Was it an awkward career move, for someone with a flying background as extensive as his?
"A few old captains went out of their way to show that I didn't impress them. But most couldn't have been friendlier, and then I got to be an old captain myself." In 2006, Gibson turned 60, then the age of mandatory retirement for airline pilots.
Since 1984, Gibson has indulged his passion for speed by racing airplanes, a sport NASA had frowned upon as too risky. (The agency grounded him for a year in 1990 for racing. In one race, his airplane and another collided, and the other pilot was killed.) In 2004, Gibson flew his green and yellow Cassutt, an experimental homebuilt designed for aerobatics and pylon racing, at 237.9 mph, beating a 20-year-old record. He also set a world altitude record in it.
The Cassutt is fast, but it's Riff Raff, a big red and white Hawker Sea Fury that Gibson races at the Reno Air Races, that draws the crowds. At the 2007 races, Gibson clocked a blistering 437 mph—the aircraft's fastest qualifying time.
Riff Raff 's owner, retired physical therapist Mike Keenum, has over 10,000 hours of flight time and flies Riff Raff in airshows, but at Reno, he wants Gibson's hands on the stick and throttle. In races, says Keenum, "the difference between winning and losing, between life and death, is measured in split seconds. You've got to be able to think fast, decide fast, and act fast. Hooter does all those things better than anyone I know."
Our tour was over. The Museum was about to open for business as we walked outside into the windy winter air.


Comments
NOT TO TAKE ANYTHING AWAY FROM MR. GIBSONS ACHIEVEMENTS BUT I HAVE TO MENTION THE NAME OF A PAN AM PILOT,CAPT. BASIL L. ROWE. BY THE TIME HE RETIRED FROM AVIATION AT THE AGE OF 60 IN 1956 HE HAD FLOWN 122 DIFFERENT TYPES OF AIRCRAFT.HIS PILOT LICENSE # WAS 415. GREETINGS FROM BOGOTA, CO......HANS
Posted by HANS G. SCHNUECKEL on March 26,2009 | 11:04AM
As another Gibson who's sometimes called "Hoot" -- I'd like to express my gratitude to Hoot for all his heroic flying. I was stationed onboard the Big "E" during the F-14 flight quals, so there's a good chance Hoot landed just above my rack on the 04 deck. From that day to this, Hoot has taken risks to make sure those who followed didn't have to. I'm sure he'd say it was mostly done for the sheer fun of it - but his professionalism shows through in every story he tells. Proud to share a last name with you Hoot -- may you continue to fly and learn for decades to come!
Posted by Steve Gibson on April 13,2009 | 09:11PM
If I remember correctly "Hoot" Gibson was the pilot of the airplane that collided at the air races with my friend and fellow pilot "Rocky" Jones who was killed. I guess Gibson has done a few other things that very few pilots get to do, walk away from a mid-air collision.
Posted by William Morgan on April 27,2009 | 10:51AM
(From Wikipedia)Captain Eric Melrose "Winkle" Brown, CBE, DSC, AFC, FRAeS, RN (born 21 January 1919) is a former Royal Navy officer and test pilot who has flown more types of aircraft than anyone else in history. He is also the Fleet Air Arm’s most decorated pilot, and holds the world record for aircraft carrier landings.He flew aircraft from Britain, America, Germany, Italy and Japan, and is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as holding the record for flying the greatest number of different aircraft. The official record is 487, but only includes basic types. For example Captain Brown flew several versions of the Spitfire and Seafire, and although these versions are very different they only appear once in the list. Due to the special circumstances involved, he doesn't think that this record will ever be beaten.
Posted by David Washington on April 29,2009 | 12:07PM
I am 11 years old and recently attended the Astronaut Hall of Fame induction ceremony at Kennedy Space Center. Hoot was our tour guide on the bus. He was so great! I enjoyed your article. He is one impressive guy! He even signed my nasa book and took a picture with me.
Posted by Cody Curabba on May 10,2009 | 02:36PM