- Paul Bikle
Paul F. Bikle (b. June 5, 1916
Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania , d. January 19, 1991Salinas, California ) Director of the U.S.National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)Dryden Flight Research Facility from 1959 until 1971, and author of more than 40 technical publications, has been associated with major aeronautical research programs including thesupersonic X-15 rocket plane, and also was a world record settingglider pilot.Civilian career
Before graduating from the
University of Detroit in 1939 with a B.S. degree inaeronautical engineering , Bikle's activity in the student chapter of the Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences (IAS), and the schoolgliding andflying club , led toflight instruction and a pilot's license from the C.A.A., the predecessor to theFAA . He later became a fellow in theAmerican Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics , the successor to the IAS. Mr. Bilke worked forTaylorcraft Aircraft inOhio before beginning his government service career.Air Force career
His career with the
U.S. Air Force began in 1940 when he was appointed an aeronautical engineer atWright Field . In 1944 he was named Chief of the Aerodynamies Branch in theFlight Test Division there. While working closely with other government agencies in establishing the first flying qualities specifications for aircraft, he also wrote AAF Technical Report 50693 "Flight Test Methods", which was used as a standard manual for conducting flight tests for more than five years. During theWorld War II years he was involved in more than 30 test projects and flew over 1,200 hours as an engineering observer.In 1947, Bikle was appointed Chief of the Performance Engineering Branch, and directed tests of the
XB-43 Jetmaster , the first U.S. jet bomber; theConvair XC-99 , and the F-86A Sabre. With the transfer of this part of the flight test mission to the newly formed Air Force Flight Test Center atEdwards AFB , he advanced to Assistant Chief of the Flight Test Engineering Laboratory in 1951.NASA career
Paul Bikle was technical director of the Air Force Flight Test Center at
Edwards Air Force Base in September 1959, when he was named Director of the NASA Flight Research Center (FRC) at Edwards, California. In July, 1962, he was awarded the NASA Medal for Outstanding Leadership for his part in directing flight operations and research activities on the highly successful rocket-poweredX-15 program. After Paul's retirement on May 31, 1971, The FRC became theDryden Flight Research Center in 1976.During his nearly 12 years with NASA he was responsible for several major aeronautical research programs, including those involving the X-15, the supersonic
XB-70 , the fleet of winglesslifting bodies that contributed to development of the Space Shuttles, and the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle that paved the way for successfulMoon landing s byProject Apollo astronauts.
Just before 1961 Christmas Paul Bikle gave directive toCharles Richard to quickly and cheaply design and build what would become the template for wing used for 'Standard Rogallo' hang gliders in modern hang gliding. Following such directive and successful test flying of theParesev [andhttp://www.nasa.gov/lb/centers/dryden/about/Organizations/Technology/Facts/TF-2004-09-DFRC.html more] versions, hundreds craftspeople made their own hang gliders with various fuselage solutions including the use of the [http://www.werner-steinbach.de/wuppertal/historie/espenlaub/espenlaub-index.html Gottlob Espenlaub: see 'Espenlaub 11' for his 1921 hang glider] triangle control bar solution (side-struted or cabled), parallel-bar solution, full-cockpit solution, trike solutions, powered-pilot solutions, and even a no-fuselage hanging-pilot solution. Paul Bikle's directive synergistically birthed a wing that would dramatically change personal aviation in powered and unpowered realms.oaring
Bikle was a veteran of 23 years of
soaring , and was president of theSoaring Society of America (SSA). He established two world soaring records on February 25, 1961 while flying his Schweizer SGS 1-23ESchweizer, Paul A: "Wings Like Eagles, The Story of Soaring in the United States", page 183. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988. ISBN 0-87474-828-3] nearLancaster, California , achieving an altitude of 46,267 feet and a total-altitude-gained mark of 42,300 feet. Both marks were certified by theNational Aeronautic Association , and theFédération Aeronautique Internationale . Bikle still holds the record for gain in height [ [http://records.fai.org/gliding/history.asp?id1=DO&id2=1&id3=26 FAI web site on the gain in height record] ] . He became a member of theSoaring Hall of Fame in 1960 and was awarded the FAILilienthal Medal , the highest award in international soaring, in 1963.Other soaring accomplishments
* Barringer Trophy 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956
* U.S. Diamond badge #3 (International #7) 1953;
* Symons Three Lennie award #11
* Eaton Trophy 1964
* Tissandier Diploma 1968
* Tuntland Award 1970, 1971
*OSTIV Plaque/Klemperer Award 1972
* World/National Competition
* Smirnoff Derby
* Sailplane Performance Studies/TestsSources:
* [http://history.nasa.gov/x15/bikle.html NASA X-15 Biography]
* [http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Gallery/Photo/Directors/HTML/E-4875.html NASA Dryden Home > Collections > Photo Home > Directors > Photo # E-4875]
* [http://www.soaringmuseum.org/halloffame/halloffamebios.html Soaring Hall of Fame Biographies]
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