Rockwell, the prime contractor, developed and built two HiMAT aircraft and delivered them to NASA, who performed the first flight in July 1979. The HiMAT program represented a $17 million investment in application of advanced technology by NASA and the Air Force Flight Dynamics Laboratory. The flight-test program was carried out at NASA's Hugh L. Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif.
HiMAT drawingsHiMAT was launched from a B-52 at about 45,000 feet. Unmanned, HiMAT was controlled by a NASA test pilot from the ground facility. The ground cockpit contained the normal flight controls -- throttle, stick, rudder pedals and sensor displays. A computer converted the pilot's actions into electronic signals telemetered to the craft, where an onboard computer sent signals through the digital fly-by-wire system to the flight control surfaces. Telemetry equipment aboard HiMAT relayed thousands of bits per second of real-time flight data back to ground computers. The flight duration allowed multitask research missions to be performed. Landings on the dry desert lakebed were made on skid-type landing gear similar to that used by the record-setting Rockwell X-15 rocket-powered research airplane.
The craft was capable of speeds of more than 1-1/2 times that of sound. HiMAT was designed to demonstrate maneuvering performance 60 percent better than advanced fighters. The main emphasis during flight testing was on high-G maneuvers in the transonic flight regime (600 to 800 mph), where superior performance is the most difficult and significant.
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