the DC-8 ...
Okay, so it was in a controlled test dive, but it did go over Mach 1 at altitude (and later delivered to Canadian Pacific)
The Yeagar flight was never billed as the flight flight to break the sound barrier. It was the first aircraft to go mach 1 in "level flight". Or in its case, climbing flight. I have also read that various aircraft in WW2 were reported to have gone faster than the speed of sound, and they reported, something like the reversing of controls???
I don't think that WW2 aircraft could resist the drag over mach 1. They'd have been blown to pieces near the barrier...
You might be correct. I'm wondering if any Luftwaffe pilots experienced it with the Me 163 or Me 262.
It's worth remembering that the DH.108 was inspired by the Me 163. It was basically a Vampire fuselage with a new swept-wing attached. The Vampire fuselage is all-wood construction like the Mosquito.
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