Edwards AFB Desert Wings Newspaper October 28, 2016

Page 1

Public Affairs, Volume 63, Number 65

Serving the community of Edwards Air Force Base California www.edwards.af.mil - www.facebook.com/EdwardsAirForceBase

Oct. 28, 2016

Aviation legend makes final flight The aviation world has lost a world-famous pilot and Air Force Test Center icon. Robert A. “Bob” Hoover – fighter pilot, test pilot and master of aerobatics – passed away Oct. 25 at the age of 94. In his long aviation career, there wasn’t much that Hoover hadn’t accomplished. In 1944, he was shot down during his 59th combat mission off the coast of Southern France and spent 16 months as a POW in Stalag Luft 1. Just two weeks before V-E Day, he managed to escape and ultimately completed his flight to freedom in a stolen Focke-Wulf 190. After the war, he was assigned to the Flight Test division at Wright Field where he evaluated a wide variety of Japanese and German airplanes and quickly established a reputation for his remarkable piloting skills and spectacular aerial hijinks. Runner-up to Chuck Yeager from a list of more than 100 test pilots considered for the assault on Mach 1, Hoover was selected as the back-up pilot for the Air Force’s accelerated X-1 test program. He flew high chase for all Yeager’s flights and thus enjoyed a vantage point which was truly unique. Sitting in the cockpit of his FP-80 at 40,000 feet on October 14, he later recalled that “I had my head on a swivel watching for him,” and, as Yeager shot by, he managed to shoot the one-and-only photo taken of the X-1 during its milestone flight. His dreams of flying the X-1 were dashed just a month later when he broke both legs bailing out of an F-84. Following a brief stint as a test pilot with General

Motors, he went to work for North American Aviation in 1950. In addition to testing all models of the F-86 Sabre and early models of the F-100 Super Sabre, he completed the first flights of the Navy’s version of the T-28 and the swept-wing XFJ-2 Fury. Throughout his life he dazzled millions of people around the world with breathtaking demonstrations of his incomparable aerobatic skills. Whether it was a 16-point roll in his P-51 Mustang, or his famed dead-engine energy management maneuvers in the Shrike Aero Commander, Hoover performed with the same remarkable skill and precision that prompted Yeager to call him “the greatest pilot I ever saw.” -Article courtesy of the Air Force Test Center History Office

Edwards AFB kicks off 2016 Combined Federal Campaign By Kenji Thuloweit 412th Test Wing Public Affairs

With a few strokes of their pens, Brig. Gen. Carl Schaefer, 412th Test Wing commander, and Chief Master Sgt. Todd Simmons, 412th Test Wing command chief, kicked off this year’s Combined Federal Campaign at wing headquarters Oct. 24. The two filled out their pledge forms along with 1st Lt. Christophe Bangerezako, 412th Medical Support Squadron, and Master Sgt. Elizabeth Ramos, 412th Force Support Squadron, who are this year’s CFC program managers. The campaign runs through Dec. 12. This year’s theme is “Make a Difference One Step and One Donation at a Time.” Edwards Air Force Base’s goal is to raise $220,000. The CFC is the world’s largest and most successful annual workplace charity campaign, where pledges made by military, federal and postal employees can support eligible nonprofit organizations that provide health and human service benefits See CFC, page 2

From left: Master Sgt. Elizabeth Ramos, 412th Force Support Squadron, watches as Brig. Gen. Carl Schaefer, 412th Test Wing commander, and Chief Master Sgt. Todd Simmons, 412th TW command chief, fill out their Combined Federal Campaign donation forms at wing headquarters Oct. 24. Ramos and 1st Lt. Christophe Bangerezako, 412th Medical Support Squadron, are this year’s points of contact. (U.S. Air Force photo by Ethan Wagner)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.