Night Stalkers
U.S. soldiers in Vietnam heard rumors of ghosts; the Viet Cong chalked it up to bad luck.
- By Roger Warner
- Air & Space magazine, May 2004
(Page 5 of 5)
They left behind some minor folklore: captured VC who wondered how U.S. artillery had tracked them in the dark, and U.S. soldiers who thought they’d seen ghosts when a silent shadow appeared directly overhead.
After the Vietnam war, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries acquired some of the YO-3As, using them for several years to catch poachers. Most of the aircraft were bought by the FBI, which used them for about a decade for suveillance. Today NASA owns one YO-3A, currently mothballed, for making acoustic measurements of other aircraft. Most are in museums, and one is in a private collection awaiting restoration.
The two original QT-2s were sent to the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School at Patuxent River, Maryland. The school had already bought some Schweizer 2-32 sailplanes and designated them X-26As, to appear to be experimental, even though they were not, in order to get around complicated procurement regulations. The QT-2s were redesignated X-26Bs, and their strange front pylons turned out to have a practical use after all, giving student pilots a chance to learn at very low speeds about yaw-roll coupling, which also affects supersonic jets.
The airplanes have a few direct descendants. Schweizer Aircraft of Elmira, New York, has produced its own quiet reconnaissance aircraft line. The Coast Guard, the CIA, the U.S. Air Force, and the governments of Mexico and Colombia have used Schweizer’s single-engine RG-8 and pusher-puller twin-tail RU-38 to spot drug smugglers at night, and to electronically eavesdrop and monitor ground events without being detected. But Schweizer’s quiet planes don’t fit the modern definition of stealth, which has come to refer to radar instead of sound.
Compared to the manned and unmanned reconnaissance aircraft of today, the QT-2s and YO-3As were primitive. Evolution has passed them by, and they seem like some exotic, long-extinct species. Their claim to history is not their effect on the Vietnam war, which was slight, but their early role in the developing stealth field and their exploitation of the physics of sound. Other means were found to accomplish the quiet birds’ purpose, and in wars fought today, U.S. military forces own the night.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5





Comments (3)
Thank you for the article on the YO-3. One night in late September or early October 1968, this phenomenon over-flew us on the other side of the Long Than North airfield. It sounded like a flock of birds and the position lights were all that could be seen.
Posted by DALE GAFFNEY on July 3,2008 | 09:37 PM
Roger Warner did an excellent article on the YO-3A. Since this article was published, we have had two YO-3A observers that had over 100 missions in this airplane. Final flights of the YO-3A took place in Vietnam, Sept 1971. March 1971 saw the installation of the constant speed 3 bladed propeller. A learning curve and courage by the pilots and observers and an understanding of ambient noise, had the YO-3A team flying well below the 800 feet over enemy targets. No YO-3A in Vietnam ever took a round, or was shot down in 14 months of operation. That is testament to the silence of this airlane at night. NASA's airplane is still flying. It is the only YO-3A operable. October 2009 it flew into the Miramar Air Show, San Diego. It will be flying at the Edwards Air Show Oct 17, 2009 see www.yo-3a.com for information and photos.
Posted by Kurt Olney on October 9,2009 | 12:02 AM
Hello,
I am Don Galbraith's daughter, Diana. My dad was head of advanced guidance and controls at Lockheed during this project. It's so exciting to read about him here!
Diana
Posted by Diana Galbraith on February 26,2010 | 11:22 PM