I Was There: When the DC-8 Went Supersonic
The day a Douglas DC-8 busted Mach 1.
- By Bill Wasserzieher
- Air & Space magazine, August 2011
It takes a village to reach Mach 1.01. The flight and ground crews for the DC-8 supersonic run included flight test engineer Richard H. Edwards, third from left, and pilot Bill Magruder, in white shirt behind sign.
Courtesy Richard H. Edwards
(Page 2 of 2)
BW: What did [going supersonic] feel like?
RHE: Well, really, the sensation was not there at Mach 1.01. At .96 Mach it buffeted for a while….
BW: So there was a little bit of a wall….
RHE: Yeah, and a little above .96 it went away, and it came back as we slowed down to .96. The thing that impressed me the most was the dark, black sky. I’d never seen anything like that. I’m sure our military pilots are familiar with it. I had mounted some cameras in the middle of the airplane, shooting out each window. I wanted to catch the [F-100 and F-104] chase airplanes out there, but I never saw the chase airplanes in the pictures. But it did show the ailerons flapping up as the shock wave left—I think it was about .97 Mach. They went up about five degrees, I think—both sides, fortunately.
BW: What did it feel like to walk on the ground again after you set down?
RHE: We were all smiles. We weren’t frightened, but we were more or less happy that we had got there. Initially, on all the flight tests we’d shoot for maximum design Mach number on each new design, which was .95 Mach. We’d normally overshoot a little so we’d be sure we would get it, so we got up to .97 quite a few times. And Bill said, “Well, if we can get up to .97, we can get up to 1.01. That’s not so far away.”
BW: You must have felt like you were a part of aviation history, a little like an early astronaut.
RHE: A little bit. [Douglas Aircraft Company president] Jackson McGowen came down and met us at the executive lunch room, the first time I’d ever been in there, and bought us all lunch. So we were kind of pleased with that. And John Londelius, VP of Flight Test, gave us each a $1,000 bonus, so that was rather nice. That was back when a thousand dollars was worth a thousand dollars.
N9604Z was delivered to Canadian Pacific Air Lines, where it served for nearly 19 years. In 1980, it was sold for scrap.
Aviation historian Bill Wasserzieher interviewed Douglas employees for the Douglas White Oaks Trust project, which comprises some 50 oral histories.





Comments (8)
Somewhere that DC8 is bent.
Posted by Jose Pinero on August 21,2011 | 11:20 PM
Your August 1, 2011 DC-8 article indicates it is the only airliner to exceed Mach 1 before the Concorde or Tu-144.
Didn't you do an article in the early 1960s indicating that the Convair 880 or 990 exceeded Mach 1?
Regards,
John K. Lewis
Posted by John K. Lewis on August 22,2011 | 07:24 AM
In reference to my previous email about the DC-8 Mach 1 flight I believe that Aviation Week did the article I mentioned.
John K. Lewis
Posted by John K. Lewis on August 22,2011 | 07:38 AM
My dad (standing in front white shirt/tie hands folded)
was the crew chief.
His last job before he retired was foreman for an aircraft parts warehouse (American Jet). it was owned by Allen Paulson who founded a small company, Gulfstream.
Posted by Thomas Irwin III on August 27,2011 | 01:41 PM
There was also a KC-135 out of Grissom AFB that went supersonic, inadvertantly. They split-S instead of a nose-low recovery after an autopilot malfunction. The wing was bent, and replaced with a B-707 wing(versus the -80 wing). Because of the longer wingspan and larger area, it outperformed other tankers on range, climb, takeoff data, etc. It was still flying in the late 1980s, but I don't know about now.
Posted by Dean Marvin on October 17,2012 | 08:36 PM
A really good story. I started at long Beach,CA 1964. It was sad moment for the co. when he took the rap for the DC-10 that nosed in France. You never hear of shock that reverberates throughout the plant. You will never convince me or any who had the slightest contact with that aircraft. It's what uncle SAM wanted! I guess we will never know why. So sorry to such a great name disappeare.
Posted by Anthony Hazard on October 30,2012 | 07:18 PM
Some years ago (10? 20?) I met a retired airline pilot who got pretty talkative. I don't remember his name, or the name of his company. That's probably just as well, because he claimed that the Boeing 727 could be flown above Mach 1.
As I recall, he got evasive when asked if he'd done it himself, but his description of technique was interesting. If I remember rightly, it went something like this: "You go to full power, and pitch down into a shallow dive. As you accelerate, you open the speed brakes [on the top of the wing] just a hair. That keeps the airplane stable as you go supersonic."
I've always wondered how much truth was in his story . . .
Posted by John Amneus on January 9,2013 | 07:46 PM
Curious - the DC-8 became CF-CPG with Canadian/CP Air and was broken up at Opa Locka in 1981. This DC-8 had a plaque attacted to the bulk head commemorating this historic event.
Anyone try to track down this plaque - now that would be kool.
Posted by Robert Reid on April 10,2013 | 07:22 AM