Summary and Key Points: A Lockheed test mission in 1966 turned into a near-instant catastrophe when an SR-71 flying Mach 3.18 at 79,000 feet suffered a right-inlet malfunction that forced manual control at the worst moment.
-During a steep bank, the inlet unstart triggered violent yaw, roll, and pitch as the aircraft’s reduced stability—made riskier by an aft center-of-gravity test setup—overwhelmed augmentation systems.
-The Blackbird departed controlled flight and disintegrated within seconds.
-Pilot Bill Weaver survived not by a clean ejection but through a brutal breakup sequence, with a pressurized suit and automatic chutes playing a decisive role.
SR-71 at Mach 3.18: The 2-Second Failure That Blew the Blackbird Apart
Aviators often describe flying as “hours of boredom punctuated by moments of stark terror.” For Lockheed test pilot Bill Weaver, that moment of terror came on January 25th, 1966, in an SR-71 Blackbird while flying Mach 3.18 at 79,000 feet.
What followed lasted only two or three seconds but resulted in the aircraft’s disintegration. It is an incident that captures both the fragility and audacity of early Mach 3 flight testing.
Pushing the Envelope with the SR-71 Blackbird
Weaver was piloting an airframe famous for its speed and altitude abilities. His objective was to evaluate the Blackbird’s reconnaissance and navigation systems, test procedures to reduce trim drag, and improve high-Mach cruise performance. The key test variable was the aft center of gravity (CG). It was to be used to reduce trim drag, which reduced longitudinal stability.
Piloting the SR-71 at Mach 3.2 and 79,000 feet in a cruise-climb profile, Weaver was already operating at the extreme edges of the Blackbird’s flight envelope, where high-speed testing often trades stability for efficiency, and where the effects of small deviations amplify rapidly.

SR-71. SR-71 photo taken at the National Air and Space Museum. Taken by 19FortyFive on 10/1/2022.

SR-71. SR-71 photo taken at the National Air and Space Museum. Taken by 19FortyFive on 10/1/2022.
Technical Context: Inlet System
SR-71 engines depended on precise inlet shock control. At Mach 3, air must be slowed from supersonic to subsonic before entering the engine.
This was achieved via a translating center-body spike, forward bypass doors, and automatic shock positioning.
Failure would lead to an inlet unstart, where shock was expelled forward, and the aircraft would experience a sudden thrust loss, violent yaw, and a “train wreck” sensation.
It was violent and shocking, and the unstart was a known issue in early SR-71 development.
Cascading Failures on the Blackbird
When Weaver’s right inlet automatic system malfunctioned, it switched to manual control. While executing a 35-degree bank turn, the immediate unstart caused the aircraft to roll farther right with the nose pitching upwards.
The control inputs were rendered ineffective.

SR-71 Spy Plane. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

SR-71 Blackbird. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

SR-71 Blackbird. Image Credit: Creative Commons.
The combination of factors—CG aft condition, plus high Mach, plus high altitude, plus reduced stability—became unmanageable. The SR-71’s stability augmentation system was overwhelmed.
Within seconds, the aircraft departed from controlled flight, and it began to disintegrate.
As one might imagine, at Mach 3 speeds, any departure from controlled flight is not recoverable.
Structural Breakup of SR-71

SR-71 Blackbird sitting in a Smithsonian Museum outside of Washington, DC back in 2013. Image Credit: 19FortyFive.
When Weaver deviated from controlled flight, the airframe experienced extreme positive and negative g-forces.
The nose section separated, and the seat belts shredded. Weaver was physically ripped from the aircraft. (It was not a conventional ejection.)
Remarkably, the ejection seat never left the aircraft. Instead, the harness was torn apart by outside forces, so Weaver survived essentially by random chance. One of the only reasons Weaver was able to survive was the fully pressurized suit he wore.
Because the altitude at which the SR-71 operates is incompatible with human life, SR-71 pilots wore fully pressurized suits that provided oxygen, prevented their blood from boiling at high altitudes, and protected against aerodynamic buffeting.
The inflated suit, in Weaver’s case, absorbed structural breakup forces and likely prevented lethal tumbling at thin air altitudes. The suit effectively functioned as a micro spacesuit, saving Weaver’s life.

SR-71 Blackbird Photo by Dr. Brent Eastwood of 19FortyFive.
The Descent
Weaver’s automatic stabilizing chute deployed, then the main parachute auto-opened at 15,000 feet.
Weaver’s faceplate was frozen over, obscuring his vision, and the oxygen line was partially detached. Weaver regained consciousness mid-descent.
Co-pilot Jim Zwayer’s parachute was visible—but Zwayer had suffered a fatal neck injury during the breakup, demonstrating just how fortunate Weaver had been.
Weaver landed in a remote New Mexico plateau and was rescued almost immediately by rancher Albert Mitchell in a personal helicopter—a remarkable coincidence of proximity.
Mitchell flew Weaver to the hospital at redline speed—even after surviving a Mach 3 breakup, Weaver’s fate still depended on geography and chance.
SR-71 Blackbird Lessons Learned

SR-71 Blackbird Artist Rendering. Image Credit: Creative Commons.
After Weaver’s flight, testing at extreme aft CG was discontinued; the trim-drag issue was solved aerodynamically instead, and the inlet control system was improved.
Later, digital inlet controls would reduce unstarts significantly. The Weaver flight’s failures thus served a purpose, leading to incremental improvement and reminding the aerospace community that at Mach 3, kinetic energy is enormous, and structural margins are minimal.
About the Author: Harrison Kass
Harrison Kass is an attorney and journalist covering national security, technology, and politics. Previously, he was a political staffer and candidate, and a US Air Force pilot selectee. He holds a JD from the University of Oregon and a master’s in global journalism and international relations from NYU.