Topic: Flying-Machines » Aircraft » Experimental Aircraft

Experimental Aircraft

The X-plane series and aircraft that have not been fully tested in flight
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The X-47 Ships Out

The Navy’s unmanned combat aircraft makes a historic takeoff, and prepares for carrier trials at sea.
December 06, 2012 | By John M. Doyle

Robot Reporters

Will UAVs become as indispensable for journalists as notepads and digital recorders?
November 16, 2012 | By Rebecca Maksel

Henry Ford Museum

Home Sweet Duralumin

A Buckminster Fuller design was grounded in aerospace technology.
November 2012 | By Nick D’Alto

Artifacts on the Road

A gallery of traveling air- and spacecraft loaned out by the Smithsonian.
September 18, 2012 | By Heather Goss

Cancelled: Vertical Flyer

The Coléoptère was one weird-looking aircraft.
July 2012 | By Jeremy Davis

designer August Bellanca

Making a Smoother (and Speedier) Airplane

Within months of its first flight, August Bellanca's Skyrocket II set five world speed records.
July 2012 | By George C. Larson, Member, NAA

Mercury

Piggyback Airplanes

Ten of aviation's most famous hitch-hikers.
July 2012 | By Lynn Keillor

Rod Hightower in the Boeing PT-17 Stearman he restored.

Rod Hightower: Build, Volunteer, Fly

An interview with the President and CEO of the Experimental Aircraft Association.
May 2012 | By Linda Shiner

Proteus Rutans 31st airplane

Design by Rutan

A retrospective of Burt Rutan's high-performance art.
January 2012 | By The Editors

Voyager

From Point A to Point A

Twenty-five years ago, Burt Rutan’s Voyager became the first aircraft to make an around-the-world flight without refueling.
January 2012 | By George C. Larson, Member, NAA

A Northrop YB-49 in flight over desert, probably in the vicinity of Muroc, California.

Are any of Northrop's "flying wings" from the 1940s still around?

What ever happened to the YB-49 and the XB-35?
August 16, 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel

Possibly the world’s pointiest jet

Loser X-Planes

Every research aircraft poses a question. Sometimes the answer is "forget it."
August 2011 | By The Editors

Northrop Grummans portrait of the future for naval aviation the X47B on the runway in Palmdale California

*Pilot Not Included

Military aviation prepares for the inevitable.
July 2011 | By Michael Milstein

Two things you will find every July in Oshkosh Wisconsin The DC 3 Duggy and planeloads of international tourists

The United Nations of Oshkosh

Flying. The other universal language.
July 2011 | By James Wynbrandt

Nesher

The Lion That Never Roared

CANCELLED: Israel's Arieh Fighter
March 2011 | By Gary Rashba

The Mizar at Oxnard Airport in August 1973.

Oldies and Oddities: A Different Kind of Hybrid

July 2010 | By Peter Garrison

X-15 drop from the B-52

Above and Beyond: An Extra Two Seconds

May 2010 | By Robert M. White as told to Al Hallonquist

Pilots needed a computer to fly Grummans X-29

Moments and Milestones: Swept Forward

January 2010 | By George C. Larson, Member, NAA

The Air Force hopes its unmanned X-37

Space Shuttle Jr.

After 2010, the only spaceplane in the U.S. inventory will be the Air Force's mysterious X-37.
January 2010 | By Michael Klesius

Boeing’s X-48B, a 500-pound blended wing-body demonstrator with a wingspan of 21 feet, banks over California’s Mojave Desert.

Batplane

Even around other X-planes, the X-48B looks weird.
August 2009 | By Peter Garrison


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