I just looked through my dad's memoirs this afternoon and came up with the following:
"Later in 1952 Emil Kissel, a flight engineer and sailplane pilot, came to Chief Pilot Dick Campbell to tell him that sailplane pilots, flying at high altitude, had discovered very fast westerly winds. Research proved this to be true, leading to discovery of the jet stream. Experimental high altitude flights showed that by going to high altitude out of Tokyo, it would be possible to make Tokyo-to-Honolulu a non-stop flight for a good part of the year.
On January 3, 1953, I happened to be on the first scheduled non-stop flight from Tokyo to HNL. Several records were set. The 4,000 mile distance was the longest scheduled to date. The flight took 10 hours, 14 minutes at an average ground speed of 390 mph in an airplane that cruised about 280 mph at high altitude. The average tailwind was 112 mph and the highest wind averaged 225 mph for two hours."
This was in B-377 N90948. On the final leg of the trip (Jan 5th), true to form, the Stratocruiser lost an engine between HNL & SFO. They diverted to Oakland because SFO was below minimum.
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