Convair XFY-1 Pogo, 1954. (Photo Credit: US Navy / National Museum of Naval Aviation / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)
In February 1954, testing was completed on the engine in San Diego. With no issues, it was then put into the fuselage for further tests to be done at Naval Air Station Moffett Field, California. These were all completed inside a hangar developed for the USS Macon (ZRS-5) dirigible in the 1930s.
Lt. Col. James “Skeets” Coleman, a US Marine Reservist and test pilot for Convair, completed the XFY Pogo’s first tethered flight on April 19, 1954. Safety lines were an integral part of this, since they ensured that, under flight test engineer Bob McGreary, the aircraft remained vertical. Multiple times over the more than 60 hours Coleman flew the aircraft, he had to call out to McGreary, “Catch me, catch me.”
In August 1954, these flights were moved outdoors. On August 1, Coleman flew his first outdoor flight, which saw him hover 20 feet above the ground, followed by a second attempt to 150 feet. Tests then moved to transitioning to horizontal flight from a vertical position. In November 1954, Coleman flew horizontally for 21 minutes.
The XFY did have some significant issues. For instance, there were no brakes and the wheels the aircraft rested on moved freely. It was important to takeoff and land in no or very light wind conditions. The US Navy could ultimately tolerate this on a prototype, but such a flaw couldn’t have been part of a production, frontline fighter. Another problem was the inclusion of the ejection seat. It was unreliable and disarmed, and the test pilot’s only option was to jump out in an emergency.
On May 19, 1955, John Knebel became the second test pilot to take control of the XFY – and the tethered flight almost ended in disaster. The following year, another two pilots began working with the aircraft and it became clear the XFY required an overhaul. This never happened, as the Navy turned its gaze toward jet fighters, and the program was officially shuttered in 1956.