Why We Miss the X-15
Not only was it the fastest. It may have been the best flight research program ever.
- By Linda Shiner
- AirSpaceMag.com, November 01, 2007
Inconel X, a ferociously strong nickel alloy, gives the X-15 its gun-metal black color. Inconel was chosen for the airplane's skin because it retained its strength up to 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit, a temperature the X-15 would routinely experience at high speeds.
Eric Long/NASM
To commemorate the 40th anniversary of the fastest flight by an airplane—the X-15’s rocket-powered, Mach 6.7 dash on October 3, 1967—U.S. Air Force Chief Scientist Mark Lewis and former Air Force historian Richard Hallion recently met with Air & Space editor Linda Shiner at the National Air and Space Museum to talk about the X-15 program and its legacy.
A&S: It’s been 40 years since the X-15 flew 4,520 mph, a record that’s never been broken. Why did we stop there? Why didn’t we continue to build faster and faster research aircraft?
Lewis: Embedded within that question is the question of whether we should have continued the X-15 or X-15-like programs. And to that the answer is clearly "yes." It’s one of the great tragedies in aerospace that we didn’t. Look at the record of the X-15 program: 199 flights—200, if you count the time an X-15 blew in half during a rocket engine ground test and shot Scott Crossfield forward a few feet. A very clever, well-conceived series of experiments and series of measurements. It was true science. The X-15 produced over 700 technical papers.
The science and the engineering that came out of the X-15 program were absolutely phenomenal. It was bold, it was daring, but it was very, very well grounded in real science, and that’s a very fine line to walk and it’s something I deal with almost every day. We want to do bold, great things, but we shouldn’t attempt to violate the laws of physics.
The X-15 was a culmination of our notion of flight test, the experiments in the air, pushing the envelope, but doing it in a logical, evolving manner.
Hallion: It was a tremendous focal point for activity. It was where you could actually take theory, and ground test, and simulation, and you could match all those against a real world flying system. Where the measurements you got were real world measurements. You didn’t have to figure out what are the scaling factors. You didn’t have to calculate from approximate data. You were getting real data.
A&S: And this data was used in the design of the space shuttle.
Hallion: The X-15 gave us the exact same kind of mission profile coming back in, once it got to Mach 6 and was headed downhill. There was a difference because the X-15 was not a delta [wing design] so you have differences in the actual approach and landing. But the low lift-to-drag ratio approach was identical, the workload on the pilot was identical. It gave us an exact indication of what would be involved in the way of cues, flight path management, energy management—everything came out of the X-15.





Comments (4)
I was priveledged to obain a summary of all the X-15 flights after the program was over. I seem to remember that the author(s)felt that the entire aerodynamic flight envelope had been explored. Having also gone out to very high Mach numbers, perhaps those responsible for such decisions did not feel that further expenditures were warranted, and that the funds were better used in other areas. It appears that they were wrong.
Posted by Bert A. Smith on October 22,2008 | 10:22 PM
In the long journey that has taken humankind from the earliest dream of flight to its ultimate realization, the X-15 will forever be one of the greatest flying machines ever to rise above the earth. It is more then simply a great flying machine, but rather it is an enduring testament to humankind's achievement and in particular the men and woman who shared in its conception, construction, and ultimately its flights to the edge of space that helped extend the boundaries of our imagination.
Posted by ZB on June 24,2009 | 08:47 PM
I had the wonderful experience of seeing one of the X-15s while working at North American Aviation's Main Plant in Inglewood. It was parked in a hangar next to the admin building on Imperial Highway.
I still remember how small it seemed. The letter box windows for the pilot and that surprisingly thick vertical stabilizer. If ever an inanimate object could be seen to live, that pioneer space vehicle appeared willing to accept any amount of awe, quietly, as it due.
It was a cold night for California, so near the sea in winter, that the surface felt cool. It was hard to imagine the temperature range that aircraft crossed in operation.
I too, feel the loss of momentum the teams at NAA and NASA lost.
We should never forget DynoSoar either.
We lost the U.S. Space Lab because the space shuttle was months too late to deliver fuel for the orbit control rockets.
Neither should the fiasco of politics running science that destroyed the US opportunity to fly a viable SST, nearly twice the size of Concorde, be forgotten. How many remember Boeing's win for the SST with their swing-wing. A swing wing that was too heavy to meet the space, passenger, and cargo requirements, and not admitted until they had spent all of the development money the congress had provided while trying to find a solution.
Then they had the gall to offer to build a fixed-wing aircraft based on Lockheed's design, if the congress would provide the funds. End of SST. Thank you 'Scoop' Jackson.
Posted by Wayne L. White on September 1,2009 | 12:22 PM
Scram technology is still limited today. At the end, X-15 was trying to extend endurance. What if? It seems that after burners, J58 type, could have been adapted at the time and the pontoon tanks filled with JP7. The finding from Sr 71 flights at Mach 3 that the ram effect is more fuel efficient at that speed may have been applicable to a hybrid rocket/air breathing afterburner configuration.
Posted by GET on August 27,2010 | 01:40 PM