The first recorded chicken gun was built in 1942 by the US
Civil Aeronautics Administration in collaboration with the
Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company. Built at Westinghouse's High Power Laboratory in
Pittsburgh, it was capable of firing bird carcasses at up to , although most tests were conducted with muzzle velocities around . The gun used compressed air as its propellant, with a compressor storing air into an
accumulator until the desired pressure was reached. To fire the gun, an operator triggered the opening of an electric quick-release valve, dumping the compressed air into the barrel. Different muzzle velocities were achieved by varying the pressure stored in the accumulator. The tests conducted with this gun were the first of their kind, and showed that the glass used in the windshields of common passenger aircraft such as the
Douglas DC-3 was extremely vulnerable to bird strikes; panels were penetrated completely by a bird traveling at only . Subsequent testing showed that
laminate panels made of glass interleaved with
polyvinyl chloride were far more resistant. before being retired at some point in 1947. A similar gun was independently developed by the
De Havilland Aircraft Company in the United Kingdom in the mid-1950s. The UK's
Royal Aircraft Establishment built a chicken gun in 1961, and in 1967 the Canadian
National Research Council's Division of Mechanical Engineering used the RAE's design as a basis for their "Flight Impact Simulator Facility", a pneumatic gun based next to
Ottawa airport. This gun remained in frequent use until 2016, at which point it was donated to the
Canada Aviation and Space Museum and replaced by a pair of more modern guns. The replacements can accommodate different sized birds more easily through the use of a modular barrel. In the 1970s,
Goodyear Aerospace developed a chicken gun that stored compressed air behind a
ceramic diaphragm and used a cardboard
sabot to center and stabilize the chicken. When fired, a needle struck the diaphragm, rupturing the seal and allowing the air to propel the projectile down the barrel. A metal ring on the muzzle stopped the sabot, but allowed the chicken to escape the barrel. The
United States Air Force built the
AEDC Ballistic Range S-3 at
Arnold Engineering Development Complex in 1972 to test the canopies and windshields of military aircraft. Like previous chicken guns, S-3 used compressed air to launch its projectiles. The gun was later used in the development and certification of multiple US military aircraft, including the
F-4,
F-111 and
A-10. the gun was still in operation. == Use in aircraft certification ==