Chuck Yeager: Breaking the Sound Barrier
Posted: Fri Jan 12, 2024 2:47 am
Chuck Yeager, the first pilot to break the sound barrier, wrote in his autobiography that on October 14, 1947 at about 8 o'clock in the morning, he entered a B-29 mothership and at 7,000 feet climbed down a ladder into the attached Bell-X1 jet that he named Glamorous Glennis after his first wife. Due to two broken ribs after being thrown off a horse on the night of October 12, Yeager, unable to stretch his right hand due to excruciating pain, used his left hand to lock the door with a sawed-off broom handle. Once the mothership reached an altitude of 26,000 feet, it went into a shallow dive, pulled up and released the X-1 through the bomb bay. A few minutes after the drop, Yeager was flying over the city of Victorville, California when the citizens below heard a sonic boom.
A machmeter is a flight instrument showing the true airspeed to the speed of sound known as Mach 1. The machmeter on the X-1 had just surpassed Mach 1 tipping right off the scale. Charles Elwood Yeager had become the first pilot in history to break the sound barrier. Mission accomplished Yeager turned Glamorous Glennis around and landed safely at the same place he started, an eight mile runway known as Rogers Dry Lake.
Yeager's SLR prior to his history making flight not only foreshadowed the breaking of the sound barrier but also presaged the accident on October 12. The sound barrier SLR should be calculated for Victorville, California and the horse accident SLR for Edwards, California. According to Yeager’s birth certificate the aviator was born February 23, 1923 at 9:30 P.M in Lincoln County, West Virginia, probably Myra since that was the birthplace of both parents listed on his birth certificate which can be seen at Astrodatabank.com. Roden rating: AA.
Mercury represents communication; therefore, it represents sound, sound being the primary form of communication among homo sapiens. Thus, one would expect Mercury to be prominent in a lunar return foretelling the breaking of the sound barrier for the first time in history and Yeager's lunar return prior to his historic accomplishment features a double dose of Mercury. Not only is transiting Mercury prominent, a mere 24 minutes separating from the SLR Ascendant, Yeager's natal Mercury is also angular, only 1 degree and 8 minutes from the I.C. The breaking of the sound barrier is represented by angular Mercury squaring angular Mars.
In the March 1957 issue of American Astrology magazine Garth Allen wrote that he had studied sixty SLRs prior to a serious accident and found Mars or Saturn near one of the four angles more often than would be expected by chance alone. Angular Mars separating from Midheaven by just 7 degrees and 3 minutes in Yeager's SLR foreshadowed the horse accident which occurred at a dude ranch near Edwards Air Force Base.
A machmeter is a flight instrument showing the true airspeed to the speed of sound known as Mach 1. The machmeter on the X-1 had just surpassed Mach 1 tipping right off the scale. Charles Elwood Yeager had become the first pilot in history to break the sound barrier. Mission accomplished Yeager turned Glamorous Glennis around and landed safely at the same place he started, an eight mile runway known as Rogers Dry Lake.
Yeager's SLR prior to his history making flight not only foreshadowed the breaking of the sound barrier but also presaged the accident on October 12. The sound barrier SLR should be calculated for Victorville, California and the horse accident SLR for Edwards, California. According to Yeager’s birth certificate the aviator was born February 23, 1923 at 9:30 P.M in Lincoln County, West Virginia, probably Myra since that was the birthplace of both parents listed on his birth certificate which can be seen at Astrodatabank.com. Roden rating: AA.
Mercury represents communication; therefore, it represents sound, sound being the primary form of communication among homo sapiens. Thus, one would expect Mercury to be prominent in a lunar return foretelling the breaking of the sound barrier for the first time in history and Yeager's lunar return prior to his historic accomplishment features a double dose of Mercury. Not only is transiting Mercury prominent, a mere 24 minutes separating from the SLR Ascendant, Yeager's natal Mercury is also angular, only 1 degree and 8 minutes from the I.C. The breaking of the sound barrier is represented by angular Mercury squaring angular Mars.
In the March 1957 issue of American Astrology magazine Garth Allen wrote that he had studied sixty SLRs prior to a serious accident and found Mars or Saturn near one of the four angles more often than would be expected by chance alone. Angular Mars separating from Midheaven by just 7 degrees and 3 minutes in Yeager's SLR foreshadowed the horse accident which occurred at a dude ranch near Edwards Air Force Base.