Streak Eagle
January 17th, 1975 a lone F-15A was stripped of its paint, speed brake, flap actuators, radar and fire control systems, unneeded cockpit instrumentation, generators, redundant radios and anything that could be left on the ground. Engineers even removed her Vulcan 20 mm cannon and all external pylons, leaving a super clean, slick, light and powerful F-15A Eagle that had only one place to go...UP like a bat out of hell!
The goal was to steal the crown from the Soviets that held the record for reaching the highest altitudes from a stationary start on the runway. The MIG-25 "Foxbat," held the three highest record positions since 1973. Prior to the Foxbat, previous altitude records had been held by the USAF F-4 "Phantom" since 1962.
Streak Eagle had one mission and that was to smash the "time to climb" records held by the Soviet Foxbat.
Streak Eagle was held in place at the end of the runway while hooked up to a hold-back bar as the pilot applied full afterburner. The explosive bolt detonated, suddenly freeing the Eagle to accelerate down the active. Rotating after only 400 feet of runway, Streak Eagle pulled into an 80-degree climb while accelerating through the speed of sound. Like a homesick angel with her low fuel levels, bare skin and minimal equipment, sporting a thrust-to-weight ratio of nearly 2:1, she sliced through the lower atmosphere like a hot knife through butter. At altitudes, the Streak Eagle even managed to beat the climb rate of the Apollo Saturn V Rocket!
After the initial climb, the pilot kept a sustained 2.5G pull coming back over the base inverted at 32,000 feet. Rolling out, the super slick jet then accelerating to over two times the speed of sound pulling 4Gs into a 60-degree climb.
Streak Eagle reached an altitude of 98,425 feet in just 3 minutes, 27.8 seconds from brake release and "coasted" on the highest attempt reaching 103,000 feet in altitude. The pilot in the attempt to utilize every last bit of energy kept Streak Eagle in its climb until airspeed bleed off to as little as 55 knots...only then pushing the stick forward and back towards the Earth. During the coast phase her engines had to be shut down before overheating or flaming out due to lack of air density. During the descent phase her engines were restarted to allow a powered approach back to base.
Streak Eagle broke eight time-to-climb world records between January 16th and February 1st, 1975. After proving that Eagles dared, she was delivered to the National Museum Of The United States Air Force where she still remains to this day.
One of the pictures in this article show the Streak Eagle (?) flying over St. Louis, MO. Where/from what base did the altitude record attempt occur? The F-15 was manufactured by McDonnell-Douglas in St. Louis, so I was curious.
Uh, actually, is was USN F-4 Phantom that had set the earlier records.
Hi gang,
Thanks for the continuing stream of great posts. I’m about 99.9% sure that the correct first name for one of the pilots is “Rogers” with the “s” vs “Roger.” I thought you might like to edit the post. (BTW, for those of us who are no longer 24-year old steely-eyed Lieutenants, the small gray type is a little challenging to read, especially on a phone display. Recommend using black.) Keep up the great stories!
I was stationed at Grand Forks Air Force Base when this happened. It was something to see and hear. Bright sunny day not at cloud in the sky and about -10 deg.
I was a Flight Test Engineer student at the Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards AFB California when Col. Smith was practicing for his flight. I was in another aircraft with a student Test Pilot waiting for the bolt to blow cutting the tether. It seemed that in the blink of an eye, that Streak Eagle was gone! One doesn’t forget something like that!
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