A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Clay Lacy. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Clay Lacy. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

The Lear Jet Turns 50 - But It Almost Didn’t Make It Off the Ground

Learjet flying in 1965
Fifty years ago today, Bill Lear stood on a runway and watched his life savings lift off from an airport in Wichita, Kansas. He was 61, and had amassed a fortune in the consumer electronics age. But the jet age was upon us, and the serial entrepreneur saw a chance to build a business around his passion, flying.

Lear Jet would become synonymous with private jets and set the standard for decades, due in equal measure to Lear’s insistence on high performance and a savvy marketing strategy that relied on social media long before anyone knew what that meant.

But the story almost ended just a few months after that momentous first flight when the original prototype came down almost as quickly as it went up, then erupted in flames just beyond the runway. Lear could only watch in dismay as his dream literally went up in smoke.

“Number one crashed,” recalls Clay Lacy, a longtime friend and business associate with Lear, who died in 1978. “It was the best thing that ever happened to Bill Lear.”

When the Lear Jet first flew on October 7, 1963, there was nothing on the civilian market that could come close to its performance. Suddenly anybody could fly as fast as the airlines. The Lear Jet wasn’t the first civilian jet for sale, but the jets that came before were bigger, much more expensive and never came close to offering the same convenience as the tiny jets from Wichita.

Today the original Lear Jet 23s and 24s are fading away because their thirsty and noisy engines are costly to operate, and not neighbor friendly at many airports. But they can still outperform the majority of private jets currently being produced. Lacy believes the Lear Jet set the bar high for every jet that came after it. And still today airplane manufacturers are trying to keep up with the little jet that almost ended its life burning in a Kansas field.

Suddenly anybody could fly as fast as the airlines.

The company, which today is part of Bombardier, started in 1960 when Lear saw an opportunity to create an airplane capable of keeping up with the jet airliners growing increasingly popular in the late 1950s.

At the time, many of the country’s biggest businesses flew aircraft like the Douglas DC-3 or Beech Model 18. These twin engine propeller airplanes were roomy but slow, plodding along at less than 200 mph. Lear knew that companies making business aircraft who couldn’t keep up with the new Boeing 707 and Douglas DC-8, which fly at 550 mph, would fall behind, literally and figuratively.

“If you guys don’t do it, I’m going to do it,” Lear told aerospace leaders in Wichita, according to Lacy. Wichita was the home of Cessna, Beechcraft and many other aviation heavyweights. Everyone chuckled, but Lear got the last laugh.

Lear had a long history of innovation. Beyond his work on the first car radio in the late 1920s — he and Paul Galvin created the name “Motorola” for the new product — Lear also developed early autopilot systems and radio direction finders in the 1930s. While still hard at work with his airplane business, he invented the 8-track cassette player in 1964, originally called the Lear Jet Stereo 8.

Eager to get started with his private jet idea, Lear bought an airplane factory in Switzerland after the country abandon plans to build a small fighter jet. After a rough start in Europe, Lear had everything packed up and moved to Wichita early in 1963. Lacy asked him at the time why on earth he’d set up shop in his competitors’ back yard. His answer is familiar to anyone in Silicon Valley: “Can you think of any place where I can steal more engineers?”

Lear wanted to build a jet that could cruise at Mach 0.8 (~530 miles per hour) and fly at 41,000 feet. This would make it nearly as fast as the new jetliners, and fly even higher. He wanted the airplane to be relatively simple to fly, making it possible for civilian pilots with little or no jet experience to transition into the new hot rod airplane with a reasonable amount of training. Lacy says every time a decision had to be made, Lear opted for simplicity, while keeping the performance. In the end he says Lear’s engineers may have done the detailed design, but the man at the helm shaped it into the reliable, high performance airplane it would become.

Everything was going well, and Lear saw his plane make its first flight on Oct. 7, 1963. Then came that fateful day in 1964, when the prototype took off on a flight to test single engine performance. It was an anxious time for Lear, because by that time he was running perilously low on money. He worried that a prolonged certification program would doom the company.

But then, the miracle. The first Lear Jet ever built crashed.

“They took off with the spoilers up, and an engine shut down,” Lacy says. The spoilers are meant to slow the airplane when it’s time to descend, and it is nearly impossible to take off if they are left up. The guy in the captain’s seat was a Federal Aviation Administration pilot. He and the Lear pilot sitting next to him had neglected to put the spoilers down for takeoff.

The airplane wallowed into the air, and the pilots realized something was wrong. They tried, and failed, to get the second engine started. Neither of them noticed the spoilers. The airplane didn’t get much more than 10 or 20 feet into the air and eventually settled back down into the field, where a wing tank ruptured and it caught fire. Nobody was hurt in the accident. At first it seemed like a disaster, but soon Lear was able to turn the accident into exactly the break the company needed.

“He was getting low on money,” Lacy says. “And he had it insured for $500,000.”

With the FAA at the controls, there was no suspicion of insurance fraud. Even better, Lear was able to make some calls to well-placed friends in Washington. “The FAA wrecked my airplane,” he told them. The FAA soon assigned enough people to speed along the certification program, and Lear was handed a type certificate for his new jet just two months after the accident (and only nine months after the plane’s first flight).

The first small business jet in history was finally ready for sale.

The speed and budget with which Lear went from idea to certification is remarkable. Today, developing a new jet can cost more than $1 billion and take more than a decade (see: Eclipse jet). The nine-month certification of the Lear Jet 23 cost just $14 million. Lacy admits that, “things were different, the value of money, but not that much different.”

Lacy and Lear would become close friends early on. Lacy was a United Airlines pilot who sold airplanes on the side. He convinced his boss at the airplane dealership, Allen Paulson — who would one day own business jet maker Gulfstream — that they should sign on as a distributor. Paulson considered the idea for a while, and eventually told Lacy he wanted to make a quick trip to Wichita to see the Lear Jet.

“Why don’t you fly me back there in your P-51, and I’ll have a look at it,” Allen said to Lacy.

Once in Wichita, the ride in the Lear Jet sealed the deal. “He was blown away,” says Lacy.

There wasn’t a private airplane on the planet that could keep up with the Lear Jet 23, which even outperformed most commercial and military aircraft.

“It will out climb an F-86,” Lacy says, referring to the North American Aviation fighter jet that ruled the skies during the Korean War. Lacy flew the F-86 in the California Air National Guard and says the Lear Jet 23 could beat it to 40,000 feet.

“The Lear takes 14 minutes, and that’s just normal climb,” he says. “If you really try, it will get there in seven.”

Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin standing by a Learjet in 1965
Anyone who wanted to travel fast and travel in style bought one.

Lacy and Allen’s west coast Lear Jet dealership outsold every other dealer in the country. The list price was $495,000. Frank Sinatra bought one. Danny Kaye was another customer, and soon became a partner in the Lear Jet dealership. Big businesses like Boise Cascade and the then ubiquitous Rexall Drugs bought Lear Jets as well. Anyone who wanted to travel fast and travel in style bought one.

Lear knew Lacy, based at the Van Nuys airport just north of Los Angeles, would be the secret to his marketing strategy. Lacy recalls sitting at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel with Bill Lear when he pulled out the Beverly Hills phone book.

“Bill asked, ‘How much does it cost to fly the Lear Jet for an hour?’” With gas at 18 cents a gallon and the cost of maintenance and upkeep, they figured $135 an hour. Lear handed Lacy the phone book.

“Call anybody you think will talk about the Lear, take them for a flight,” he said. “I’ll pay you $185 an hour to cover it.”

“We flew a lot of people,” Lacy says. “One of the reasons for flying people in Hollywood, whether they were going to buy it or not, was to get them talking about it. Get that household name.”

The plan worked. Beyond making countless celebrity flights, the Lear Jet was featured on TV programs like The Dating Game, where winners would be whisked off to Las Vegas or San Francisco. Within a few years, the Lear Jet name had become part of popular culture.

By the late 1960s, Lear had sold his company to the Gates Rubber Company and with it went the dealerships (and the name was contracted to Learjet). Clay Lacy went on to start the first jet charter business at the Van Nuys airport with a single Lear Jet in 1968. Today he manages a fleet of 55 jets, including the first Lear Jet he ever owned, serial number 12. And Van Nuys is now home to more than 250 private jets.

Learjet changed hands a few times after Lear sold the company, and today the company’s newest models continue to roll off the Bombardier assembly line. The Canadian company acquired Learjet in 1990 and currently offers four different models. The new versions still carry the same impressive performance as the original, with cruise speeds over 500 miles per hour. The new Learjets continue to be popular aircraft, though jets from Cessna and Gulfstream fly faster and further.

At 82, Clay Lacy still flies regularly. He has more than 53,000 hours flying experience, and many of those are in the older (and newer) Lear Jets, “it handles so damn good, like a little fighter plane.”

Lacy recently flew one of his Lear 24s at the Reno Air Races. He had a smoke system installed and flies a complete aerobatic routine in the business jet. He’s also used Lears extensively for filming movies, including all of the air-to-air scenes in Top Gun, as well as just about every commercial for the airlines.

“It’s a good thing he shot for high performance, for the moon so-to-speak,” Lacy says of Lear’s original plan. “Or the whole industry might be behind a little.”


Source:
http://www.wired.com/2013/10/lear-jet-50th/#slideid-95541

The Human Fly

Daredevil Rick Rojett flying on a DC-8, piloted by Clay Lacy, on 19 June 1976 in Mojave..

Clay Lacy and The Human Fly

'The Human Fly' DC-8-30 // N420AJ
The photo on this page has been kicking around my inbox for more than a year, having been sent to me by someone asking if it depicted a real event. Given that we live in a world where Photoshop is a verb, it’s a perfectly logical question.
As you’ll see from today’s video, the photo is quite real and depicts Clay Lacy’s fanciful flight of The Human Fly on the roof of a DC-8 in 1976. I vaguely recall the actual event, but if it got much publicity at the time, the memory of it seems to have been lost to the years, so I decided to phone Lacy for the background. As with everything in Lacy’s career, the backstory is interesting, the result of just the right alignment of having an airplane available, an airshow to promote, an ever-willing stuntman and a sponsor to pay for it all.
Although the video doesn’t explain it, the Human Fly’s benefactor was a pair a brothers in Montreal who owned a prosperous Pepperoni factory but were a tad bored with the sausage business. So they raised $200,000 and formed a promotional company of which the Human Fly was only the opening act. The DC-8 version of the Fly was Rick Rojatt, but the brothers apparently envisioned garbing others in the Fly’s disco-style red suit, it being 1976 after all, for all sorts of stunts. They planned a rocket flight across the English Channel and a swan dive from the CN tower in Toronto.

Lacy got the easy part. He happened to have a DC-8 available, thanks to an Alan Paulson deal to remarket a handful of retired JAL aircraft. Lacy knew enough people in the Washington side of the FAA to grease the approval wheels and in a few weeks time, he had the world’s only DC-8 with an external seat. Actually a perch, I suppose.

Would today’s FAA go for such a thing? Hard to imagine. In 1976, all the feds could think of to slow down the Human Fly project was to require a maintenance program, which Lacy was able to pull together relatively easily. But at least in those days, someone in the FAA would actually at least tell you what was required. Today, good luck.

The Human Fly act was but a page in a chapter of Lacy’s stunning and long career in aviation. He’s very much the last of a breed whose experience bridges the world of piston and jet aircraft. His book, Lucky Me, has him photographed with everyone who’s anyone in aviation, from World War II aces to moon walkers. Lacy did stints as a military pilot, a test pilot, air racer and airline pilot and he’s yet active today in the industry from his headquarters at Van Nuys Airport.

Although most of us probably can’t list Lacy’s considerable achievements, we probably see them every day. When the Learjet first appeared in the mid-1960s, Lacy saw not just a fast, appealing business jet, but a camera platform that could shoot anything that flew. Thus was born Astrovision, the sophisticated camera system used to shoot movies and high-end commercials of airliners sailing into the sunrise. You can see early Astrovision at work in the Human Fly video.

Computer-generated imagery has put a dent in that business, but real footage is sometimes still cheaper than CGI. “That’s especially true if you want the ground in the shot,” Lacy told me. “It costs hundreds of thousands to do that with CGI, but for an airline commercial, they can rent the 747 and me for less than $100,000.” Which brings us full circle. Today, the Human Fly could be a CGI project, but what a thrill to know it wasn’t.


Source:
http://www.avweb.com/blogs/insider/Clay-Lacy-and-The-Human-Fly-221146-1.html

Lucky Me

Kétségtelen, szerencsés ember, aki ilyen életutat tudhat a magáénak.. :)

[Portrait] Clay Lacy

Clay Lacy, one of the greatest aviation pioneers of all
Clay Lacy (born August 14, 1932) is the founder and chief executive officer of Clay Lacy Aviation, established in 1968 as the first executive jet charter company in the Western United States. His professional career includes serving as a scab, airline captain, military aviator, experimental test pilot, air race champion, world record-setter, aerial cinematographer and business aviation entrepreneur. Lacy has flown more than 300 aircraft types, logged more than 50,000 flight hours and accumulated more hours flying turbine aircraft than any other pilot.


Aviation career

Growing up in the farmland of Wichita, Kansas during the Great Depression, Lacy developed an early fascination with flight. He learned how to build model airplanes at age five and created his first gasoline-powered flying model at age eight. At age 12, Lacy piloted his first aircraft at Cannonball Airport, built on his grandmother’s farm about three miles outside the city limits of Wichita, where he worked in exchange for flying time. In 1948, at age 16, he earned a flight instructor rating.

By age 19, Lacy had accumulated nearly 2,000 hours of flight time as both an instructor and ferry pilot. In January 1952, Lacy joined United Airlines as copilot on the Douglas DC-3 aircraft and was stationed at Los Angeles International Airport, where he was based for his entire airline career. During his time with United Airlines, Lacy flew the Convair 340, Douglas DC-3, Douglas DC-4, Douglas DC-6, Douglas DC-7, Douglas DC-8, Douglas DC-10, Boeing 727 and Boeing 747-400. He retired seniority No. 1 in 1992 after 41½ years of incident-free flying.

In 1954, Lacy took military leave from United Airlines to join the California Air National Guard at Van Nuys Airport, where he flew the F-86 Sabre jet and became the officer in charge of instrument training. He was called to active duty in 1961 for one year during the Berlin crisis, flying the C-97 Stratofreighter on missions to Japan and Vietnam. He retired from military service three years later.

In 1964, Lacy flew the first Learjet into Van Nuys Airport in proximity to Hollywood’s burgeoning entertainment industry, shaping a new era in corporate air transportation and mobility. In 1968, he founded Clay Lacy Aviation as the first jet charter company on the West Coast, known as one of the most experienced operators of private jets in the world.

Between 1964 and 1972, Lacy found time between flying for United Airlines and running his private charter business to fly his P-51 Mustang in air races across the U.S. In 1970, he placed first in the Reno National Air Races Unlimited class competition.

In the early 1970s, in partnership with Continental Camera Systems, Inc., Lacy helped revolutionize air-to-air cinematography with the Astrovision camera system. He is credited with more than 3,000 film projects for the military, motion pictures and television, including most airline commercials featuring air-to-air photography.

Lacy holds 29 world speed records, including a 36-hour, 54-minute, and 15-second around the world record in 1988 flying a Boeing 747SP called “Friendship One” that raised $530,000 for children’s charities.

On July 17, 2010, Lacy was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame for his achievements as an aviation pioneer. The same year, he was awarded the Pathfinder Award by the Seattle Museum of Flight and the Federal Aviation Administration's Wright Brothers Master Pilot Award. In November 2011 Lacy was inducted into the Kansas Aviation Hall of Fame, housed at the Kansas Aviation Museum in Wichita, KS.


The Lear connection

Lacy, Lear and Kaye in a Lear-40 mock-up
During development of the Learjet in the early 1960s, Lacy formed a close personal relationship with the aircraft’s inventor William Powell Lear. At Lear’s invitation, Lacy made several trips to his hometown of Wichita to tour the factory and share his knowledge and ideas.

After participating in a Learjet demonstration flight in 1964 with friend and business partner Allen Paulson, Lacy was appointed manager of sales for 11 Western states at the Learjet distributorship California Airmotive Corporation. The same year, Lacy resigned from the California Air National Guard to focus on the new business venture and become one of the first pilots to earn a Learjet type rating.

In October 1964, Lacy flew a Lear Model 23 from Wichita to Los Angeles to become the first corporate jet based at Van Nuys Airport. The Learjet’s popularity in the entertainment industry began with American singer, actor and Rat Pack leader Frank Sinatra who was an early aircraft buyer.

1965, Lacy and longtime friend and former California Air National Guard pilot Jack Conroy flew the Learjet on a record-setting transcontinental round-trip flight from Los Angeles to New York and back. The flight marked the first time a business jet made a round-trip flight across the U.S. between sunrise and sunset on the same day.

The same year, actor, comedian and pilot Danny Kaye was appointed vice president of public relations for the distributorship, renamed Pacific Lear Jet. Lacy and Kaye flew several hundred hours in the Learjet together, making four charity flights to benefit the United Nations Children’s Fund. In 1968, Lacy founded his own on-demand charter company, where he developed a clientele of Hollywood celebrities and prominent business people, a legacy that continues today.


Air races

Lacy flying a P-51 Mustang (N64CL)
Between 1964 and 1972, Lacy found time between flying for United Airlines and running his private charter business to fly his P-51 Mustang in every Unlimited class air race in the U.S. He served as president of the national Professional Race Pilots Association from 1966 to 1970.

Flying with the character “Snoopy” painted on the tail of his signature purple race plane, Lacy consistently placed second and third in the competitions, but aspired to win first place in a major pylon race. In 1970, Lacy claimed victory as national air race champion in the Unlimited class.

The following year, he also placed first in a cross country race from Milwaukee to St. Louis and in the St. Louis Fighter Pilot Air Tournament. He also won first place in The Great Race from London, England, to Victoria, British Columbia flying a Learjet.

In 1970, Clay created worldwide attention when he and Allen Paulson flew a four-engine Douglas DC-7 nicknamed Super Snoopy in the California 1000 Mile Air Race at Mohave, California. They finished in sixth place out of twenty at an average speed of 325 miles per hour, marking the first and only time a four-engine airliner ever competed in a pylon event.


Aerial cinematography

In partnership with Continental Camera Systems, in the early 1970s Lacy revolutionized air-to-air cinematography with Astrovision, a unique relay lens system with periscopes mounted on the top and bottom of the airplane’s fuselage. With full video monitoring to film above or below a Learjet, the system is able to rotate 360 degrees in any direction and tilt up and down with no speed or altitude restrictions. At its introduction, never before had any camera system provided such continuous and unrestricted use.

Filming flying scenes and stunt work for major motion pictures has been part of Lacy’s lifelong work. Overall, he has filmed more than 3,000 projects for the military, feature films and television, including almost every airline commercial featuring air-to-air photography. It was Lacy who recorded most of the action-packed aerial sequences in Paramount Pictures’ Top Gun (1986). He is also known for his work on the movies Armageddon (1998), Cliffhanger (1993) and Behind Enemy Lines (2001).


Famous flights

Clay Lacy with N147UA in the background
With 29 world speed records under his belt, Lacy’s name has appeared in many newspaper headlines and aviation record books.

On Sept. 19, 1962 in California’s Mojave Desert, Lacy and fellow Air National Guard pilot Jack Conroy attracted national attention when they made the first flight of the Pregnant Guppy, a Boeing 377 Stratocruiser modified to carry the Saturn rocket booster in support of the U.S. space program. The aircraft carried its first payload for NASA to Cape Canaveral one year later.

In 1973, Lacy and fellow United Airlines pilot William Arnott made aviation and education history by organizing an around-the-world flight in a chartered United Airlines DC-8 jetliner for aeronautical students from Mount San Antonio College located in Walnut, California. Two years later in 1975, Lacy and the same crew flew students on an eight-day South American sojourn. These tour flights named “Classroom in the Sky” pioneered the concept of education from a jet plane.

One of Lacy’s most notable achievements was setting a new around-the-world speed record in 1988 with his 36-hour, 54-minute, 15-second flight in a Boeing United 747SP called “Friendship One.” With U.S. astronaut and Apollo 11 commander Neil Armstrong on board as guest of honor, along with other aviation notables and celebrities, this record-breaking flight raised $530,000 for children’s charities worldwide. Lacy and his wife Lois, along with long-time friends Bruce McCaw and Joe Clark, organized the flight, which averaged over 623 miles per hour and topped the previous record by 112 miles per hour.

In 1995, Lacy was one of the first aircraft owners to equip his Gulfstream jets with Blended Winglet™ technology developed by Aviation Partners Inc., founded by Joe Clark and Dennis Washington. That June, in a Gulfstream IISP inscribed with the words “Wings of Change” across its side, Lacy and Clark set world speed records during a flight from Los Angeles to Paris. The flight culminated with display of the jet at the Paris Air Show. On the way home, they also established a world speed record from Moscow to Los Angeles. Lacy and Clark set yet another speed record in the Gulfstream IISP in 2003 on a flight from Los Angeles to Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. During Lacy’s 1999 “Midway 2000” flight to celebrate the New Year, he and 40 guests traveled over the Pacific Ocean to be among the first to enter the new millennium. Lacy piloted his Boeing 727 from Southern California by way of Hawaii and Midway Island to the International Dateline. Cruising just one-tenth of a mile west of the imaginary line where every day officially begins, the passengers then passed into January 1, 2000 while it was still 4 a.m. on December 31, 1999 on the West Coast. In a period of one hour, the group traveled through five date changes before celebrating the New Year on the ground in Midway Island 24 hours later.


Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clay_Lacy

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