Anyone substantiate this??....
Quote:
Colonel Cass Hough went on extended active duty in the 8th Air Force, just six months prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor. A decorated test pilot and fighter pilot, he didn’t return from overseas until October, 1945, having won many an air battle from the English Channel to New Guinea. Most notably, he had the distinction of having tested the limits of the Lightning P-38 in an experimental, yet successful, 43,000-foot vertical dive during which the plane broke the sound barrier.
According to his Air Force citation which was accompanied by the Distinguished Flying Cross, “Colonel Hough achieved…the longest terminal velocity dive in history. He knowingly and deliberately entered unknown regions of the air. The courage, skill and devotion to duty displayed by this officer reflect the highest credit upon himself and the Armed Forces of the United States.”
From a 1943 issue of Lockheed-Vega Star (company newspaper)...
Quote:
LtCol. Hough, from Plymouth, MI made the longest vertical dive in history in a P-38, and thus flew faster than any human being, at 780 mph.
Is this true? I was researching this fellow after buying an old aircraft logbook with Cass S. Hough listed as owner/purchaser. Fascinating history lesson. He was Vice President of Daisy then later President and responsible for many innovations there and moved the company to AR. Performed some pretty exhaustive research on P38 performance and developing droop snoot versions.