Northrop's Chief Test Pilot Vance Breese flew the N-1M on its maiden flight, unexpectedly bouncing into the air during a planned high-speed taxi run. He reported that the aircraft could fly no higher than five feet. Flight could only be sustained by maintaining a precise
angle of attack, but
Theodore von Kármán solved the problem by making adjustments to the trailing edges of the elevons. Control of the aircraft was achieved through the use of a system of
elevons and wingtip rudders. The elevons served in tailless type aircraft both as elevators and
ailerons, while split flaps on the downward angled wingtips took the place of a conventional rudder; they were later straightened after that angle proved unnecessary during flight testing. The flight test program continued with Moye W. Stephens, Northrop Test Pilot and Secretary to the Northrop Corporation, serving as a test pilot. Early tests showed the N-1M to be satisfactory in stability and control, but overweight and underpowered. The aircraft's two Lycoming O-145 four-cylinder engines (buried in the wing to reduce drag) were replaced by two six-cylinder 6AC264F2 air-cooled Franklin engines. By November 1941, after 28 flights, Stephens reported that when attempting to move the N-1M about its vertical axis, the aircraft had a tendency to "
Dutch roll." The oscillations proved to be manageable when adjustments were made to the aircraft's wing configuration. The N-1M proved to be basically sound, paving the way for Northrop's later and much larger
Northrop YB-35 and
YB-49 aircraft. The aircraft was donated to the
United States Army Air Forces in 1945 and was placed in the storage collection of the National Air Museum the following year. It sat there for nearly three decades, but was brought back to static, non-flying status, in its final flight configuration, after several years of restoration during the 1980s. The N-1M is now on public display at the
National Air and Space Museum's
Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. ==Specifications (N-1M)==