Twelve pilots flew the X-15 over the course of its career.
Scott Crossfield and
William Dana flew the X-15 on its first and last free flights, respectively.
Joseph Walker set the program's top two altitude records on its
90th and
91st free flights (347,800 and 354,200
feet, respectively), becoming the only pilot to fly past the
Kármán line, the 100 kilometer,
FAI-recognized boundary of outer space, during the program.
William Knight set the program's
Mach (6.70) and speed (4,520
mph) records on its 188th free flight.
Neil Armstrong was the first pilot to fly the program's third plane, the X-15-3. Following his participation in the program,
Joe Engle commanded a future spaceplane, the
Space Shuttle, on two missions.
Robert Rushworth flew 34 free flights, the most in the program.
Forrest Petersen flew five, the fewest.
Robert White was the first person to fly the X-15 above 100,000 feet.
Milton Thompson piloted a series of typical flights during the middle of the program.
John McKay was injured in (and recovered from, returning to active flight status) a landing accident which damaged the X-15-2, leading to its refurbishment as the modified X-15A-2.
Michael Adams was killed in the program's
191st free flight. Five pilots were Air Force personnel, five were NASA personnel, one (Crossfield) was employed by manufacturer North American, and one (Petersen) was a Navy pilot. Over thirteen flights, eight pilots flew above 264,000 feet or 50 miles, thereby qualifying as astronauts according to the United States definition of the space border. All five Air Force pilots flew above 50 miles and were awarded military
astronaut wings contemporaneously with their achievements, including Adams, who received the distinction posthumously following the flight 191 disaster. However the other three were NASA employees, and did not receive a comparable decoration at the time. In 2004, the
Federal Aviation Administration conferred its first-ever commercial astronaut wings on
Mike Melvill and
Brian Binnie, pilots of the commercial
SpaceShipOne, another spaceplane with a flight profile comparable to the X-15's. Following this in 2005, NASA retroactively awarded its civilian astronaut wings to Dana (then living), and to McKay and Walker (posthumously). Eleven flights above 50 miles were made in the X-15-3, and two were made in the X-15-1. Every X-15 pilot also flew as a program chase pilot at least once, supporting missions in which they were not flying as lead pilots. Other chase pilots included future astronauts
Michael Collins,
Fred Haise and
Jim McDivitt. The two NB-52 mother ships were most frequently piloted by
Fitz Fulton. On one occasion
Chuck Yeager, former pilot of the X-15's predecessor
X-plane the
X-1, the first crewed craft to break the
sound barrier, assisted as NB-52 co-pilot for an aborted flight. ,
Bob Rushworth,
John McKay,
Pete Knight,
Milt Thompson, and
Bill Dana. ==Flight numbering==