Tall and handsome, a magnetic personality, mentally brilliant yet full of youthful enthusiasm, Iven Kincheloe was possibly the greatest pilot America has ever known. His friendly character and his fabulous flying skill made him outstanding even among the great test pilots of the United States Air Force.
Kinch was a pilot, but by no means an ordinary one. He lived to fly, and he loved every minute he spent “boring holes into the sky.” An aircraft engineer as well as a flier, he knew every detail of construction of every airplane he flew. He piloted just about every type of military airplane built during the middle and late fifties, a period of ex-plosive technological progress that brought forth planes capable of flying at two and three times the speed of sound.
In the rock-ribbed, rocket-powered X‑2 Kinch flew his most spectacular missions, soaring to the incredible height of 126,000 feet two years before a Soviet satellite officially started the Space Age. Kinch was, to use his own term, a “space bug,” and he knew that man would penetrate farther into space. It was inevitable that this dedicated and gifted pilot should have been the man first selected to take the X‑15 into space flight.
Author(s): James J Haggerty
Edition: 1
Publisher: Duell, Sloan and Pearce
Year: 1960
Language: English
Pages: 148
City: New Yprk
Tags: Iven Kincheloe
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
I. INTRODUCTION
II. THE START OF THE DREAM
III. COLLEGE DAYS
IV. KINCH GETS HIS AIR FORCE WINGS
V. PREPARING FOR KOREA
VI. IVEN KINCHELOE, DOUBLE ACE
VII. FRUSTRATION AT NELLIS AFB
VIII. THE EMPIRE TEST PILOTS’ SCHOOL
IX. KINCH MEETS HIS FUTURE WIFE
X. A NEW DREAM—THE X‑2
XI. KINCH TAKES OVER AS ROCKET PILOT NUMBER ONE
XII. FIRST OF THE SPACEMEN
XIII. PLANNING THE ALL-OUT SPEED RUN
XIV. LAST FLIGHT 04 OF THE X‑2
XV. A NEW ASSIGNMENT THE X‑15
XVI. THE END OF THE DREAM