propeller was still the performance standard Before the H-1 took to the air, the world absolute speed record was , held by a
Macchi M.C.72 seaplane and set in October 1934. The landplane record was , averaged by Raymond Delmotte in a
Caudron C.460. Hughes piloted the H-1's maiden flight on August 17, 1935, at
Grand Central Airport in
Glendale, California. A month later, on 13 September at Martin Field near
Santa Ana, California, Hughes broke the landplane speed record clocking averaged over four timed passes. The aircraft was loaded with a minimal amount of fuel to keep the weight down and Hughes was not supposed to make the 3rd and 4th passes. Exhausting the fuel supply, he crash-landed in a beet field south of Santa Ana without serious damage to either himself or the aircraft. Considering that contemporary service aircraft were still
biplanes, Hughes fully expected the
United States Army Air Corps (USAAC) to embrace his aircraft's new design and make the H-1 the basis for a new generation of U.S. fighter aircraft. His efforts to persuade the Air Corps failed. In postwar testimony before the Senate, Hughes indicated that resistance to the innovative design was the basis for the USAAC rejection of the H-1, "I tried to sell that airplane to the Army but they turned it down because at that time the Army did not think a cantilever monoplane was proper for a
pursuit ship...". Aviation writer William Wraga asserts that the H-1 Racer inspired later radial engine fighters such as the
Republic P-47 Thunderbolt, the
Mitsubishi A6M Zero and the
Focke-Wulf Fw 190, without offering any arguments for that being the case other than "Hughes showed them how it should be done." After the war, Hughes claimed that "it was quite apparent to everyone that the Mitsubishi A6M Zero had been copied from the Hughes H-1 Racer." He claimed the wing shape,
tail design and general similarity of the Zero were derived from his racer.
Jiro Horikoshi, designer of the Mitsubishi Zero strongly denied the allegation of the Hughes H-1 influencing the design of the Japanese fighter aircraft. The Hughes H-1 Racer is featured in the 1940 RKO Radio Pictures movie
Men Against the Sky, playing the role of a prototype "McLean Aircraft" high-speed pursuit craft. ==Disposition==