As flight operations for NASA’s quiet supersonic X-59 aircraft accelerate, its team has picked up their testing tempo, completing two test flights in a single day for the first time.
The first dual-flight day was on April 30 at NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California. Making its 11th and 12th flights, the X-59 completed multiple test objectives at altitudes ranging from 12,000 to 43,000 feet and speeds from 528 to 627 mph (Mach 0.8 to Mach 0.95).
The pace, and the objectives the teams met, support NASA’s aim to complete the first two phases of the Quesst mission – envelope expansion and acoustic validation – by the end of 2026. The dual flights marked significant progress and reflected the extraordinary efforts of the X-59 team.
“The team has done an amazing job meeting the weekly planned flight rate,” said Cathy Bahm, Low Boom Flight Demonstrator project manager. “During taxi testing last summer, we demonstrated that we could do two tests in a day. I’m proud to see that our team has met the challenge of executing two flights a day, and I’m very excited to see it happen regularly.”
Dual-flight days include two pl …