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Hughes H-1 Racer

Air and Space Museum

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  • Metal and blue-winged Hughes H-1 Racer
  • Top of metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft in museum
  • Metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft in museum
  • Metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft
  • Front of metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft with propeller and engine
  • Top of metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft in museum
  • Metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft
  • Top of metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft
  • Top of metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft in museum
  • Metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft in museum
  • Front of metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft with propeller and engine
  • Front of metalic silver and blue Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft with propeller and engine in museum
  • Blue wings front wheels of landing gear of Hughes H-1 Racer aircraft

    Object Details

    Manufacturer

    Hughes Aircraft Co.

    Model

    Hughes Aircraft Co.

    Physical Description

    Experimental, single engine, monoplane for air racing; wood wings with blue paint; yellow markings; bare aluminum fuselage.

    Summary

    The Hughes H-1 racer, designed by Howard Hughes and Richard Palmer and built by Glenn Odekirk, was developed to be the fastest landplane in the world. On September 13, 1935, Hughes achieved this design goal by flying the H-1 to a new world speed record of 567 kilometers (352 miles) per hour at Santa Ana, California. Also known as the Hughes 1B, the H-1 was designed with two sets of wings: a short set with a span of 7.6 meters (25 feet) for speed record flight, and a long set with a span of 9.2 meters (31 feet, 9 inches) for transcontinental flight. The aircraft as it is exhibited here is equipped with the long set.
    Hughes broke the transcontinental U.S. speed record in the H-l on January 19, 1937, flying from Los Angeles to Newark, New Jersey, in 7 hours, 28 minutes, and 25 seconds. His average speed for the 4,000-kilometer (2,490-mile) flight was 535 kilometers (332 miles) per hour.

    Long Description

    The Hughes H-1 racer was developed to be the fastest landplane in the world, Also known as the 1B Racer, it was designed by Howard Hughes and Richard Palmer and built by Glenn Odekirk. On September 13, 1935, Hughes achieved the design goal by flying the H-1 to a new world speed record of 352.322 mph. The record was set over a specially instrumented course near Santa Ana, California.
    Since Hughes did not require a sponsor for the aircraft, the H-1 had no markings except the license number NR258Y (later NX 258Y) in chrome yellow against the dark blue background of the wings, and in black against the doped aluminum rudder. The fuselage was left in its natural polished aluminum finish. The H-1 was powered by a Pratt and Whitney Twin Wasp Junior radial piston engine, which was rated at 700 horsepower at 8,500 feet but which could deliver 1,000 horsepower for high-speed flight. A wind tunnel model of the aircraft was exhaustively tested in the 200-mph wind tunnel at the California Institute of Technology’s Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory. Actual performance figures for the aircraft closely matched the predicted design performance.
    The H-1 had two sets of wings, The wings Hughes used to break the land plane speed record were of a low aspect ratio and shorter than those with which it is now fitted. The wings now fitted on the aircraft span 31 feet, 9 inches. have a moderateect -aspratio and were used when Howard Hughes broke the transcontinental speed record in the H-1 on January 19, 1937. Hughes departed Los Angeles before dawn and arrived at Newark Airport, outside New York City, 7 hours, 28 minutes, and 25 seconds later. His average speed over the 2,490-mile course was 332 mph, and this nonstop flight was truly an outstanding accomplishment.
    The Hughes H-1 was designed for record-setting purposes, but it also had an impact on the design of high-performance aircraft for years to come. Some of the outstanding design features of the H-1 were: a close fitting bell-shaped engine cowling to reduce airframe drag and improve engine cooling; gently curving wing fillets between the wing and the fuselage to help stabilize the airflow, reduce drag, and prevent potentially dangerous eddying and tail buffeting; and retractable landing gear to reduce drag and increase speed and range (typical of everything or the H-1, the landing gear was so perfectly fitted that the gear fairings and doors are difficult to see without looking closely). All rivets and joints are flush with the aircraft’s aluminum alloy skin as are the flathead and counter-sunk screws on the plywood wings. The ailerons are designed to droop 15 degrees when the flaps are fully extended to improve lift along the full length of the wing during landing and takeoff. The pilot sits in a smoothly faired and totally enclosed cockpit, which had an adjustable canopy windscreen to permit easy entry and exit from the aircraft.
    The Hughes H-1 racer was a major milestone aircraft on the road to such radial engine-powered World War II fighters as the American Grumman F6F Hellcat and Republic P-47 Thunderbolt, the Japanese Mitsubishi Type 0 (Zero), and the German Focke-WuIf FW 190. It demonstrated that properly designed radial-engine aircraft could compete with the lower-drag inline designs despite having larger frontal areas because of their radial engine installations.
    The H-1 was kept in the Hughes factory at Culver City, California, until it was donated to the Smithsonian Institution in 1975.

    Alternate Name

    Hughes H-1 Racer

    Key Accomplishment(s)

    Record-Setting Landplane

    Brief Description

    The Hughes H-1 racer was the fastest landplane in the world. On September 13, 1935, Howard Hughes flew the H-1 to a world speed record of 567 km/hr (352 mph) at Santa Ana, California. Hughes also broke the transcontinental speed record in the H-1 in 1937.

    Credit Line

    Gift of the Summa Corp.

    Inventory Number

    A19750840000

    Restrictions & Rights

    CC0

    Type

    CRAFT-Aircraft

    Dimensions

    length: 339 in, wingspan: 396 in as displayed
    Other: 381in. (967.8cm)

    Country of Origin

    United States of America

    See more items in

    National Air and Space Museum Collection

    Location

    Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA

    Exhibit Station

    Aerobatic Flight

    Data Source

    National Air and Space Museum

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv9e06dc4f1-0d70-4b10-b01d-ef40330f4f3f

    Record ID

    nasm_A19750840000

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