{"id":1000121,"date":"2026-05-19T10:32:03","date_gmt":"2026-05-19T08:32:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/grumman-xf10f-jaguar-swing-wing-first-flight-1952\/"},"modified":"2026-05-19T10:33:53","modified_gmt":"2026-05-19T08:33:53","slug":"grumman-xf10f-jaguar-swing-wing-first-flight-1952","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/grumman-xf10f-jaguar-swing-wing-first-flight-1952\/","title":{"rendered":"The Grumman XF10F Jaguar: 74 Years Ago Today, the Swing Wing Took Off"},"content":{"rendered":"<style>.et_pb_title_container h1.entry-title { padding-top: 40px !important; }<\/style>\n\n<p>Seventy-four years ago today &mdash; 19 May 1952 &mdash; at Edwards Air Force Base in the high California desert, Grumman test pilot Corwin &#8220;Corky&#8221; Meyer climbed into the cockpit of an aircraft so strange that nobody else in the U.S. Navy was qualified to fly it. The XF10F-1 Jaguar had a wing that swept back and forward at the pilot&apos;s command, a tailplane that floated freely on bearings, a Westinghouse J40 turbojet that produced barely enough thrust to keep the airframe airborne, and a flight-control system that engineers described as &#8220;a system of nesting incompatibilities.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n<p>It would fly thirty-two times. Meyer would be the only pilot who ever took it up. By April 1953 the U.S. Navy would have killed the programme, and the two airframes &mdash; one flying, one ninety percent finished &mdash; would be expended in crash barrier tests on aircraft-carrier deck simulators. The Jaguar, on paper, was a complete failure.<\/p>\n\n<p>It was also the aircraft that proved the swing wing could work. Without the XF10F-1 there would be no F-111 Aardvark, no F-14 Tomcat, no MiG-23, no Tornado, no B-1B Lancer. Every variable-geometry fighter of the second half of the twentieth century traces, in lineage, back to one of the strangest prototypes ever to fly out of an American military test base.<\/p>\n\n\n<div style=\"background:#eef2f7;border-radius:10px;padding:18px 22px;margin:24px 0 28px;font-size:15px;line-height:1.6\"><strong style=\"display:block;margin-bottom:10px;color:#333;font-size:14px;letter-spacing:0.04em;text-transform:uppercase\">Quick Facts<\/strong><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Aircraft<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">Grumman XF10F-1 Jaguar<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">First flight<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">19 May 1952 &mdash; 74 years ago today<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Test pilot<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">Corwin &#8220;Corky&#8221; Meyer (the only pilot ever)<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Test location<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">Edwards Air Force Base, California<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Customer<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">U.S. Navy (carrier-based fighter requirement)<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Engine<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">Westinghouse XJ40-WE-8 turbojet (6,800 lbf)<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Configuration<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">Variable-sweep wing (13\u00b0\u201342\u00b0)<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Total test flights<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">32<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Programme cancelled<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">25 April 1953<\/span><\/div><div style=\"display:flex;border-top:1px solid #d8dee8;padding:6px 0\"><span style=\"flex:0 0 38%;color:#555\">Direct descendants<\/span><span style=\"flex:1;color:#222\">F-111 Aardvark, F-14 Tomcat<\/span><\/div><\/div>\n\n\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">An Aircraft Carrier Problem<\/h2>\n\n<p>The Jaguar was designed to solve a contradiction the U.S. Navy could not engineer its way out of in 1947. Jet fighters were getting heavier every year. Carrier-deck approach speeds were climbing toward 130 knots, the upper limit of what a 1940s catapult and arresting gear could handle. Naval aviation had two choices: build bigger carriers, or build wings that could change shape between takeoff and supersonic dash.<\/p>\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\" style=\"margin:0 0 24px\"><img data-opt-id=54992195  fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/0\/04\/Grumman_XF10F-1_in_flight_c1952.jpg\" alt=\"Grumman XF10F-1 Jaguar in flight at Edwards Air Force Base, 1952\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;border-radius:6px\"><figcaption style=\"font-size:13px;color:#777;text-align:center;margin-top:6px;font-style:italic\">The Grumman XF10F-1 Jaguar &mdash; BuNo 124435 &mdash; in flight at Edwards Air Force Base in 1952. The wing&apos;s swept-back configuration is visible. (US Navy \/ Wikimedia)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n<p>Grumman submitted a design with both. The wing pivoted at the root, sweeping from a 13-degree position for takeoff and landing to a 42.5-degree position for high-speed flight. Combined with leading-edge slats and a slow approach speed, the configuration would let a 1950s carrier launch a jet fighter as easily as a piston-engined Avenger. Combined with a high-sweep cruise setting, the same airframe would be capable of low-supersonic dash.<\/p>\n\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">The Westinghouse J40 Catastrophe<\/h2>\n\n<p>The J40 turbojet, which was supposed to produce around 10,000 pounds of thrust, was the single most destructive engine programme in U.S. naval-aviation history. Westinghouse&apos;s J40 was a year late, then two years late, then four years late. By the time the Jaguar was ready for engine fitment, only the older, lower-rated XJ40-WE-8 was available &mdash; producing 6,800 pounds of thrust instead of the promised 11,000. The Jaguar, designed around the higher figure, was now severely underpowered.<\/p>\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\" style=\"margin:0 0 24px\"><img data-opt-id=996141949  fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/5\/50\/Grumman_XF10F-1_Jaguar_on_ground.jpg\" alt=\"XF10F-1 Jaguar on the ground at Edwards AFB\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;border-radius:6px\"><figcaption style=\"font-size:13px;color:#777;text-align:center;margin-top:6px;font-style:italic\">XF10F-1 Jaguar at Edwards AFB, 1952. The aircraft&apos;s free-floating T-tail is visible. (US Navy \/ Wikimedia)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n<p>Meyer&apos;s first flight on 19 May 1952 confirmed what Grumman engineers privately feared. The aircraft would not climb on a single engine. Slats deployed asymmetrically. The free-floating T-tail oscillated. Pitch authority was marginal. Meyer brought it back to Edwards safely, mostly because he was one of the best test pilots in the country.<\/p>\n\n\n<div style=\"background:#f8f9fa;border-left:4px solid #1565c0;padding:20px 22px;margin:18px 0 24px;border-radius:0 8px 8px 0;font-size:16px;line-height:1.7;display:flex;gap:20px;align-items:flex-start\"><a href=\"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/3\/32\/F10F_Jaguar.jpg\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"flex-shrink:0\"><img data-opt-id=79615012  data-opt-src=\"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/3\/32\/F10F_Jaguar.jpg\"  decoding=\"async\" src=\"data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20viewBox%3D%220%200%20100%%20100%%22%20width%3D%22100%%22%20height%3D%22100%%22%20xmlns%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2F2000%2Fsvg%22%3E%3Crect%20width%3D%22100%%22%20height%3D%22100%%22%20fill%3D%22transparent%22%2F%3E%3C%2Fsvg%3E\" alt=\"Corwin \"Corky\" Meyer\" style=\"width:96px;height:96px;border-radius:50%;object-fit:cover;object-position:top;display:block;border:2px solid #ddd\"><\/a><div><em>&ldquo;It was a fun airplane to fly because it had so much wrong with it. You had to think harder per minute in the Jaguar than in anything else Grumman ever built. Every flight, something else needed to be added to the list of things to fix.&rdquo;<\/em><div style=\"margin-top:10px;font-size:14px;color:#555\"><strong>Corwin &#8220;Corky&#8221; Meyer<\/strong> &mdash; Grumman Chief Test Pilot, recounting the XF10F-1 to USNI Naval History Magazine<\/div><\/div><\/div>\n\n\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">Thirty-Two Flights and Out<\/h2>\n\n<p>Over the next year, Meyer flew the airframe 32 more times. The swing-wing mechanism &mdash; the part everyone expected to fail &mdash; worked flawlessly on 31 of the 32 flights. The wing pivoted on command, locked into position, and produced exactly the aerodynamic behaviour Grumman&apos;s wind-tunnel models had predicted. The variable-geometry concept was, in this sense, vindicated.<\/p>\n\n<p>Everything else, however, was a disaster. The J40 had compressor stalls. The hydraulic system leaked. The flight-control computer &mdash; an analogue system Grumman had built specifically for the Jaguar &mdash; behaved unpredictably in pitch. Pilot-induced oscillation was the rule rather than the exception. The free-floating tailplane that was supposed to reduce control loads at high Mach numbers behaved like a separate aircraft strapped to the back of the Jaguar.<\/p>\n\n<p>On 25 April 1953, the U.S. Navy cancelled the programme. The single flying prototype was retired immediately. The second airframe, ninety percent complete on the production floor, was finished only to be expended in carrier-barrier crash tests. A third static-test airframe became a gunnery target on the Naval Air Station Patuxent River ranges.<\/p>\n\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">The Idea That Outlived the Aircraft<\/h2>\n\n<p>The Jaguar did not enter service. The Jaguar&apos;s wing, however, never left service after 1952. Grumman engineers who had worked on the XF10F-1 carried the variable-geometry concept with them through the rest of the 1950s and into the 1960s. When General Dynamics began work on the F-111 in 1962, the Jaguar&apos;s wind-tunnel data was on the desk. When Grumman won the U.S. Navy&apos;s VFX competition in 1970 &mdash; the contract that became the F-14 Tomcat &mdash; the lineage was even more direct. Several of the Jaguar&apos;s engineers were on the Tomcat team. The Tomcat&apos;s wing-sweep system, refined through twenty years of variable-geometry experience, traces its operating logic to the XF10F-1.<\/p>\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\" style=\"margin:0 0 24px\"><img data-opt-id=1791947236  data-opt-src=\"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/3\/32\/US_Navy_Grumman_F-14A_Tomcat_%28Top_Gun%29_-_51166791897.jpg\/1280px-US_Navy_Grumman_F-14A_Tomcat_%28Top_Gun%29_-_51166791897.jpg\"  decoding=\"async\" src=\"data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20viewBox%3D%220%200%20100%%20100%%22%20width%3D%22100%%22%20height%3D%22100%%22%20xmlns%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2F2000%2Fsvg%22%3E%3Crect%20width%3D%22100%%22%20height%3D%22100%%22%20fill%3D%22transparent%22%2F%3E%3C%2Fsvg%3E\" alt=\"US Navy Grumman F-14A Tomcat in Top Gun colours\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;border-radius:6px\"><figcaption style=\"font-size:13px;color:#777;text-align:center;margin-top:6px;font-style:italic\">The Grumman F-14A Tomcat &mdash; the operational variable-geometry fighter the XF10F-1 Jaguar made possible. Two decades of design refinement separate the Jaguar from the Tomcat, but the engineering pedigree is direct. (US Navy \/ Wikimedia)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n<p>The MiG-23, Tornado IDS, B-1B Lancer and Tu-160 all owe a debt to the swing-wing pioneering work the Jaguar started. None of those aircraft would have been built if the XF10F-1 had not first proved that the concept was aerodynamically sound, even if the rest of the airframe could not catch up.<\/p>\n\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">The Single Test Pilot<\/h2>\n\n<p>Corky Meyer never lost his affection for the Jaguar. He flew most of Grumman&apos;s great post-war fighters &mdash; the F9F Panther, the F9F Cougar, the F-11 Tiger, the F-14 Tomcat &mdash; but the XF10F-1 was the airframe he talked about most in retirement. He outlived every member of the Jaguar design team, becoming the last living institutional memory of an aircraft that had, technically, never gone anywhere. He died in 2011, aged 90, having spent the last decade of his life patiently explaining to aviation historians that the Jaguar was much more important than its operational record suggested.<\/p>\n\n<p>Meyer was right. Every Tomcat that ever launched off a Nimitz-class catapult, every F-111 that ever flew low through Indian Springs, every Tornado that ever buzzed across the Friesian flatlands, was descended from the strange experimental aircraft that flew once a month for a year out of Edwards Air Force Base, broke down constantly, never delivered on a single original requirement, and yet quietly changed every variable-geometry programme that followed. Seventy-four years after the Jaguar&apos;s first flight, that legacy is still in flight every time an F-14 Tomcat &mdash; the Maverick Act may yet put one back in the air over the United States &mdash; folds its wings back.<\/p>\n\n<p><em>Sources: U.S. Naval Institute Naval History Magazine (December 2020); Wikipedia &mdash; Grumman XF10F Jaguar; Defense Media Network; Plane Historia; MilitaryFactory; Military Matters &mdash; Forgotten Aircraft; War Wings Daily.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n<div style=\"background:#f0f4ff;border-left:4px solid #5C91FF;padding:16px 20px;margin:32px 0 8px;border-radius:0 8px 8px 0\">\n<p style=\"margin:0 0 8px;font-weight:600;color:#333\">Related Posts<\/p>\n<p style=\"margin:4px 0\"><a href=\"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/maverick-act-saves-last-three-f-14-tomcats\/\">Maverick Act Saves Last Three F-14 Tomcats<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"margin:4px 0\"><a href=\"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/the-tomcat-may-fly-again-congress-passes-the-maverick-act\/\">The Tomcat May Fly Again \u2014 Congress Passes the Maverick Act<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>May 19, 1952: Corky Meyer flew the XF10F Jaguar at Edwards. The aircraft was a disaster \u2014 but the variable-geometry wing it pioneered became the F-111, the F-14, and every swing-wing fighter since.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":27,"featured_media":1000142,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_yoast_wpseo_focuskw":"","_yoast_wpseo_title":"XF10F Jaguar: 74 Years Since the First Swing-Wing Flight","_yoast_wpseo_metadesc":"On 19 May 1952, the Grumman XF10F-1 Jaguar made its first flight. 32 flights and a year later it was cancelled. Its swing-wing legacy lives on in the F-14, F-111 and B-1B.","_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","editor_notices":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[666,664],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1000121","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-history-and-legends","category-military-aviation"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>XF10F Jaguar: 74 Years Since the First Swing-Wing Flight<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"On 19 May 1952, the Grumman XF10F-1 Jaguar made its first flight. 32 flights and a year later it was cancelled. 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