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On August 23, 1954, the first flight of the C-130 Hercules transport aircraft occurred. An excerpt from the article:
"It was 1951, and the U.S. Air Force was seeking designs for an aircraft capable of hauling large bulky equipment, including artillery pieces and tanks, over long distances. It had to land in tight spaces, slow to 125 knots for paratroop drops, and fly, if need be, with one engine. What the Air Force wanted, in other words, was a tough, versatile heavylifter with plenty of “trunk” space.
Hall Hibbard, Lockheed’s chief engineer, eyed the request and saw potential. Design genius Kelly Johnson, by contrast, viewed it as a potential disaster, a diversion from the high-speed, high-performance jet fighters that were his focus.
“If you send that in,” Johnson told his boss, Hibbard, referring to an early proposal for the aircraft, “you’ll destroy the Lockheed Company.”
It’s a good thing Hibbard didn’t listen. When the prototype YC-130 taxied for its inaugural flight on Aug. 23, 1954, it was clear to all—even Johnson— that the Lockheed engineers had forged something timeless out of a seemingly simple list of Air Force requirements.
Later officially nicknamed Hercules, the prototype had a cargo deck that was capable of carrying an astonishing 300 pounds per square foot, lifted into the air after a ground roll of a mere 855 feet, an astoundingly short distance considering most aircraft of that size required 5,000 feet."
"It was 1951, and the U.S. Air Force was seeking designs for an aircraft capable of hauling large bulky equipment, including artillery pieces and tanks, over long distances. It had to land in tight spaces, slow to 125 knots for paratroop drops, and fly, if need be, with one engine. What the Air Force wanted, in other words, was a tough, versatile heavylifter with plenty of “trunk” space.
Hall Hibbard, Lockheed’s chief engineer, eyed the request and saw potential. Design genius Kelly Johnson, by contrast, viewed it as a potential disaster, a diversion from the high-speed, high-performance jet fighters that were his focus.
“If you send that in,” Johnson told his boss, Hibbard, referring to an early proposal for the aircraft, “you’ll destroy the Lockheed Company.”
It’s a good thing Hibbard didn’t listen. When the prototype YC-130 taxied for its inaugural flight on Aug. 23, 1954, it was clear to all—even Johnson— that the Lockheed engineers had forged something timeless out of a seemingly simple list of Air Force requirements.
Later officially nicknamed Hercules, the prototype had a cargo deck that was capable of carrying an astonishing 300 pounds per square foot, lifted into the air after a ground roll of a mere 855 feet, an astoundingly short distance considering most aircraft of that size required 5,000 feet."
Story of Innovation: C-130 Hercules
Posted from lockheedmartin.com
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 7
Posted >1 y ago
SGT (Join to see) Never been on One in the Air, Been in One on the Ground. Now C-141's and C-5's I've travelled a Bit in those.
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SrA John Monette
>1 y
Rode in a C-5 from Germany to Dover on convalescent leave. Rode backwards, but couldn't tell it. Rode in a C-130 doing evasive maneuvers for an exercise. Didn't lose my lunch though!!
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
>1 y
SrA John Monette - Rode into Dover Once! Dover is Not a Great Place for the Living.
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SrA John Monette
>1 y
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel - All I saw of it was the waiting area at the flight line. We weren't "at war" at the time (1990) so didn't see any coffins or honor guards.
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Edited >1 y ago
Posted >1 y ago
And versitle it is! I love the things Lockheed has done; bleeding-edge stuff and the less fashionable but strong, powerful and "Herculean"... Truly GREAT contributions to our country and aviation worldwide.
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