Driver: Andy Green of Britain
The scene: Black Rock Desert, Nevada
At world-record speed, Andy Green’s flying mile went by in just under 4.7 seconds. Stop and think about that. In the time it took you to read these words, a mile just went by.
A lot was happening in the cockpit, Green explains.
“The car is all manually controlled,” he says. “Manual steering, manual throttle control, manual brakes, manual parachute.” The reason for manual control, he said, is to minimize things that can fail: “There’s no computer glitches. Monitoring the power and speed of the car, winding the jet engines up at a fixed rate, then getting the engines up to full power. Big flames are now coming out of the back. That light-up process takes all of five seconds, but I have to do it at the right point. Then I’m keeping the car straight.”
Green remembers a dicey moment when his car drifted away from the safety line painted across the desert. He began to fight the car hard, muscling the steering wheel. The safety line was disappearing from his view as he was nearing the speed of sound. He lifted off the throttle for a split second to tweak the aerodynamic balance of the car, just enough so he could steer back in line. Then he put his foot down hard on the accelerator.
What happens when a car hits the speed of sound? Journalists present on the scene reported hearing the sonic boom. But the driver inside the car, ironically, does not experience it. “On the plus side,” Green says, “where I was sitting, I had quite an interesting view.”