Airplane

Airplane

  • First Sustained Flight with a Powered, Controlled Airplane

    First Sustained Flight with a Powered, Controlled Airplane
    Wilbur and Orville Wright of Dayton, Ohio, complete the first four sustained flights with a powered, controlled airplane at Kill Devil Hills, 4 miles south of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. On their best flight of the day, Wilbur covers 852 feet over the ground in 59 seconds.
  • First Modern Commercial Airliner

    First Modern Commercial Airliner
    In February, Boeing introduces the 247, a twin-engine 10-passenger monoplane that is the first modern commercial airliner. With variable-pitch propellers, it has an economical cruising speed and excellent takeoff. Retractable landing gear reduces drag during flight
  • First Jet Powered Air Craft

    First Jet Powered Air Craft
    The prototype De Havilland Comet makes its first flight on July 27. Three years later the Comet starts regular passenger service as the first jet-powered commercial aircraft, flying between London and South Africa.
  • First Small Aircraft to Enter Mass Productions

    First Small Aircraft to Enter Mass Productions
    The prototype Learjet 23 makes its first flight on October 7. Powered by two GE CJ610 turbojet engines, it is 43 feet long, with a wingspan of 35.5 feet, and can carry seven passengers (including two pilots) in a fully pressurized cabin. It becomes the first small jet aircraft to enter mass production, with more than 100 sold by the end of 1965.
  • Concorde SST Introduced into Commercial Airline Service

    Concorde SST Introduced into Commercial Airline Service
    The Concorde SST is introduced into commercial airline service by both Great Britain and France on January 21. It carries a hundred passengers at 55,000 feet and twice the speed of sound, making the London to New York run in 3.5 hours—half the time of subsonic carriers. But the cost per passenger-mile is high, ensuring that flights remain the privilege of the wealthy. After a Concorde accident kills everyone on board in July 2000, the planes are grounded for more than a year. Flights resume in N
  • First Aircraft Produced Through Computer-aided Design and Engineering

    First Aircraft Produced Through Computer-aided Design and Engineering
    Boeing debuts the twin-engine 777, the biggest two-engine jet ever to fly and the first aircraft produced through computer-aided design and engineering. Only a nose mockup was actually built before the vehicle was assembled—and the assembly was only 0.03 mm out of alignment when a wing was attached.
  • Airbus 350

    Airbus 350
    The Airbus 350 is a double decker plane. It is the largest plane built and had enough seats for 555 people.