White Rocket
How all U.S. Air Force pilots since 1968 have met their Mach.
- By Peter Garrison
- Air & Space magazine, September 2005
Excellent visibility helps T-38 pilots fly tight formations.
Northrop Grumman Corporation (NASM SI NEG. #00079050)
TWENTY-THREE YEARS OLD, FRESH OUT OF COLLEGE, and a newly minted Air Force lieutenant, Howard Morland reported to Reese Air Force Base in Lubbock, Texas, for flight training in January 1966. In place of the fleet of Lockheed T-33s in which the previous generation of pilots had trained were precise rows of brand-new Northrop T-38 Talons blazing chalk-white under the winter sun. “There was nothing bird-like about them,” Morland remembers. “Their wings were so far back and so small and thin that some of the new students believed that they functioned more like the feathers on an arrow, and that most of the lift came from the fuselage.” Another rumor, likewise false, was that the airplane accelerated so rapidly on takeoff that the hydraulics couldn’t get the wheels up before the aircraft exceeded the speed for wheels-down flight; little wings had to be added to the landing gear to hurry it along.
This was heady stuff, but shortly after Morland arrived, a student pilot who had recently soloed died in the crash of a T-38. “We all made a pilgrimage to the wreckage, a mile beyond the end of the runway,” Morland recalls. “The ribs of the burned-out fuselage reminded me of the rotting carcass of a beached whale.” Overhead, the number of T-38s practicing landings was unusually large. “Everybody had to go aloft and shake it off.”
Morland spent a few months of flight training in the Cessna T-37, a fat, sluggish tadpole of a jet trainer. T-38s worked out on a parallel runway. “During every touch-and-go landing in the T-37, I would see a T-38 flash by at nearly twice my speed,” he recalls. “It looked like a comic book superhero.”
In those days, the very first lesson in the T-38 syllabus was supersonic flight at 40,000 feet. “In a matter of minutes we were going faster and higher than anyone outside the military aviation fraternity had ever gone,” Morland says. Flying in supersonic formation, the wing kept bumping into an invisible but seemingly solid object: the lead airplane’s shock wave.
The supersonic component is gone today, but much of the training syllabus is unchanged: formation, blind flying, slow flight, approaches to stalls, single-engine procedures, and landing…and landing…and landing.
Now, as then, landing is the great challenge of flying the T-38. “Instructors always did it right,” Morland says, “but they seemed to be in conspiracy not to tell students the secret.” The underlying aerodynamic problem was the tiny wing; it offered little forgiveness to a student who didn’t have the proper attitude, height, and power as the runway threshold flashed beneath the tires.
The T-38 began life in 1954 as the N-156, Northrop Aircraft’s 156th design project. Originally, it was supposed to be a small supersonic fighter capable of operating from the Navy’s short-deck “jeep” escort carriers. But in the mid-1950s, Navy doctrine changed: Little carriers were out, big ones were in, and the small supersonic carrier-based fighter was no longer needed. Northrop, an independent-minded company, went ahead with the project on its own, recasting it as a lightweight fighter, tagged N-156F, for export. At about the same time, the Air Force issued a General Operating Requirement for a supersonic trainer to replace its obsolescent straight-wing T-33s and prepare pilots for the faster, heavier fighters of the Century Series, the F-100 through F-106. Thus the N-156T was born.
The N-156 story had really begun even earlier. In 1952 Northrop had been working on a fighter project, the N-102, called the Fang. It had a shoulder-mounted delta wing, an F-16-like underbelly airscoop, and a single General Electric J79 turbojet engine. At the time, there were two standard fighter engines: the Pratt & Whitney J57, 14 feet long, weighing 4,000 pounds, and developing 18,000 pounds of thrust with afterburning; and General Electric’s larger and more powerful J79. These two engines were the principal reason jet fighters looked as big as locomotives alongside the more human-scale single-seaters of World War II.





Comments (6)
As Northrop test pilot Lew Nelson rolled down the main
Edwards A.F.B. runway in the first prototype YT-38 to lift
that white airplane into the air for its' very first flight
on the morning of 10 April, 1959,Air Force Captain Swart
Nelson deftly timed his descent in an F-100F to bring his
aircraft directly abeam Nelsons' as it lifted from the earth. In the aft cockpit of that F-100F, I strained to
control the Adrenalin which flowed through me, in order to
steady the 16mm Bell and Howell with which I was to film
this historic 1st flight. I was acutely aware of the fact
that this was an historic flight; and, that I was the only
photographer in the air to record it.
Out side of the birth of my son and my daughter, I'd have
to say that this; and subsequent moments filming various
stages of the Category I flight test program, stand out
as premier moments in my 79 years of life. And how very
gratifying to know that so many of these sleek little
white airplanes still perform the service for which they
were designed. What a testament to the quality of the
Northrop teams who designed, constructed, and tested this
machine.
Posted by on November 27,2008 | 04:36 PM
While reviewing a prototype Angle of Attack system on a T-38 at Randolph AFB in 1969, The Chief of Ops, a bird colonel, expressed his view to me that the T-38 would satisfy the USAF Training Commands advanced training syllabus until the year 2020, or another 50 years. It appears that he was right since USAF recently completed retrofiting 500 T-38's with glass cockpits. This to allow for students to transition from the newer T-6, Texan ll primary trainers with glass cockpits that replaced the T-37 dog whistles with round dial cockpits. I take a great deal of pride in having been part of the T-38/F-5 engineering team.
Posted by Mike Kennedy on September 25,2009 | 02:08 PM
The white beauty,
that´s what we german Students called it in Sheppard AFB.
My time on the T-38 started in July 1976 and ended with graduation in January 1977! The following 3.100 hours in the Phantom was great, but i´ll never forget the time in the T-38.
It´s amazing, that bird will be still flying when i´m long gone!
Posted by Franz Ruf on January 1,2010 | 12:17 PM
Franz
I was at Reese AFB June 76-until May 77 graduation from UPT and we met on the flight line at Sheppard in the fall of 76. I had hit a Hawk on TO on a return flight to Reese in a T-37 cross country night training ride and came back to Sheppard with fire lights illuminated and with a windshield full of blood!! What a return to Sheppard, as I had been there in '69 as an enlisted aircraft maintenance mechanic trainee! And, my friend, was in Germany at Rhine-Main 70-72 no less!! Who would have envisioned that 7 years later I'd be in the cockpit of my dreams. Well, not exactly yet, but I was on my way to a long aviation career!!
Respectfully,
Andrew Blaha, Colonel USAF (Retired)
Now, at 60 youthful years old, also a retired Captain from American Airlines.
All the best to you.
andyblaha@gmail.com
Posted by Andrew Blaha on May 13,2010 | 10:02 PM
Flew the White Rocket as a UPT student at Reese in the early 80's and I still have the occasional dreams of the AOA indicator in the pattern.....Green donut all the way down final...manage throttles, don't pull the power until over the numbers and aero-brake. It's gratifying to know that I wasn't the only aviator who found the Talon a challenge to land.
Posted by Miles E. Maynard on February 22,2011 | 06:57 PM
Flew T-38 at Vance AFB. OK, as a 20 year old foreign student from Denmark. Those days formed me for the rest of my life. The experiences in the T-38, contact and cross-country, is among the very best experinces in my life, and I remember it as if it was yesterday. Nothing like it! Thanks.
Fly safe and enjoy.
Posted by Erik Holck on March 14,2012 | 02:52 PM