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World's Biggest Airplanes : Huge Aviation

For a few thousand years the biggest things in the skies were only in our
imaginations, flying figments of myth and fable: the Roc from Sinbad’s
tales, the Garuda bird from the Mahabharata, the Thunderbird from North
America, the Brazilian Blue Crow, and other high-flying nightmares or
soaring benevolent gods and spirits.

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Biggest Airplanes

*Sputtering, Creaking, Terrifying Monsters*

The Wright Brothers are often given most of the recognition for the first
powered flight but Gustave Whitehead, Alexander Feodorovich Mozhaiski,
Clement Ader, and many others should get a share of the fame, too. Whoever
is responsible, it wasn’t long before the skies were full of sputtering,
creaking, and – for the most part – very unreliable aeronautical devices.

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(futuristic art by Harry Grant Dart)

It took the first world war to change aircraft from a killing and maiming
hobby for the rich to a killing and maiming war machine. War helped advance
the science of flight and necessitated bigger planes.

One monster plane of that time was Igor Sikorsky's *Ilya Murometz*, a huge
improvement over his legendary *Russky Vitaz*, the first four engine
aircraft. But the Ilya Murometz didn't begin as a beast of the skies.
Originally designed as a luxurious passenger liner featuring electric
lighting, heat, a bathroom, and even a glass floor, the bomber must have
been amusing as well as terrifying to its wealthy passengers.

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(images credit: histarmar.com.ar)

Another iteration of such approach was Tupolev ANT-20 "Maxim Gorky":

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And a really huge Russian monster plane from the early 1930s: *Ka-7* (more
info), named after engineer Kalinin, not the famous political figure.

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(images via Modelist-Konstruktor, 1989)

*Art and Elegance Between Wars*

In the years between wars, airplanes kept getting bigger. Outrageous
concepts like Norman Bel Geddes *Airliner Number 4* appeared, featuring 9
decks of luxury hotel accommodation, bars and engine rooms:

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It would sleep 606 passenger in comfort, easily bringing them across
Atlantic. More images and info about Bel Geddes fantastic dream planes are
here. It seems to be a logical development of 1910s British Airliner of the
Future:

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(image via)

Don't miss also this "Freak of the Month" concept from Modern Mechanics,
1931:

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(image credit: modernmechanix)


But let us get back from aviation dreams to reality. Take the elegant *Handley
Page HP42*, for instance: a four-engined beauty with an impressive track
record of no crashes while being used as an airliner -- which gives you an
idea of how safe it was to fly back then.

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One of the larger and more beautiful aircraft in the next few decades was
the awesome *1936 Boeing Stratoliner*. Unfairly called a ‘whale’ because of
its chubbiness, the plane was not only huge but also state of the art; today
we enjoy flying in pressurized comfort because of technology premiered in
the silver flying fish of the Stratoliner.

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Another aircraft both immense and legendary - *The H-4 Hercules*. Arguably
the standard by which “huge aircraft” are measured –- as well as how
"completely screwed up" is defined. Its one and only flight was in 1947,
where it flew for around a mile, reaching altitude of 70 feet. Originally
planned as the ultimate military transport, it is more commonly known as its
hated -- at least by its creator Howard Hughes -- moniker, *the Spruce Goose
*.

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(image credit: Bettman/CORBIS)

The aircraft had originally been ordered by the US government during World
War II as a giant cargo plane for the armed troops and tanks. Howard
Hughes's creation was the world's largest plane at the time and is still the
largest flying boat ever built. It also holds records for the largest
wingspan at 97.5 meters, tallest airplane at 24.2 meters, and the largest
aircraft ever made from wood.

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*Nazi's Ugly Brute*

Art and elegance may have been one of the early fatalities in the second
world war, but striving to have the biggest (anything) certainly wasn’t.

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To call the *Messerschmitt Me 321* big is like calling 1939 to 1945
unpleasant. Created originally as a glider, the Gigant could haul an
insanely large amount of cargo. And an insane bunch of soldiers: 130 plus
hardware ... 23 tons of hardware.

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(images via)

Because the Gigant was so huge, getting the damned thing into the air was,
at best, problematic. First it was towed up with a pair of Heinkel 111
bombers, which was alternatively unsuccessful or disastrous. Then they tried
fusing two 111s together to make a Frankenstein’s monster of a machine –-
almost as bestial as the Gigant itself. Finally the Luftwaffe stuck engines
on the Me321, which made an ugly brute even uglier but at least it got off
the ground.

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*Heavy Bombers of the (Potential) Doomsday*

On the other side of the war was an eagle, a silvery steel bird of prey: the
huge and beautiful *B-29 Superfortress*. Although getting the immense B-29
up to its ceiling of 40,000 feet was a struggle, once it got up there
nothing could reach it or, at 350 mph, catch it. Even if something managed
to come close to it, its formidable defenses could cut any threat to shreds.
Featuring many impressive advancements, and some frustrating problems, the
plane was kept on active duty long into the Korean war.

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With the advent of jet power, aircraft designers began to think really big.
Think of your average doomsday film and you immediately picture the roaring
ascent of smoke-blasting, eight-engined, B-52 bombers. But before B-52 there
was another huge American bomber: *Convair B-36* "Peacemaker":

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(images via)

Like the B-29, the *B-52* "Stratofortress" was an aeronautical powerhouse, a
heavy-lifting behemoth. And like the B-52, it was kept in service until …
well, they are still being used today.

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(image source: US Air Force)

Heavy bombers transforming into LEGO pieces in the minds of dazed Cold War
engineers:

Arthur Kimes writes to us: "Soviets also proposed to stick together a bunch
of big airplanes to make a REALLY huge one. Kind of like a Lego dream come
true: In the early-mid 1950s the USAF had a plan to link 3 B-36s (wingtip to
wingtip) to have a extended range delivery system. When this behemoth got
close enough to the Soviet Union each would drop off a parasite
fighter-bomber (probably the F-92 - which also was never built) and the
released FBs would make a high-speed dash and drop a bomb on their targets.
The B-36s would split up and return, the F-92s would have to try and find a
friendly airfield in Turkey or something like that."

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(image source: TM, 1975)

"When you consider the B-36 is still the largest bomber ever built, the idea
of 3 of them flying joined at the wingtips is astounding."


*The Ugliest Airplane Ever Built?*

*The Aero Spacelines Super Guppy* looks more like a prop from a Japanese
monster movie than a real airplane. The Guppy is also high on the irony
meter as it was mostly used to haul nearly-completed components -- of other
airplanes.

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(images credit: Mischa Oordjik, Alastair T. Garoiner)

The Airbus A300-600ST (Super Transporter) or Beluga:

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(images via)

Here is a Russian carrier *VM-T "Atlant"* used in a Buran and Energia space
programs, which is perhaps the only airplane capable of carrying on its
"shoulders" a load larger and heavier than itself:

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(images via)

Transporting a fuel tank for the second stage of Energia rocket:

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(image source: "Cosmonautics - A Colorful History" ed. by Dr. Wayne R.
Matson)


*Nuclear-Powered Lockheed Mothership*

Nothing comes close in size to this unbelievable concept developed by
Lockheed in the 1970s:

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Note small "children" airplanes, attached to its wings... Its hard to
imagine anything bigger flying in the skies, still retaining the shape of a
common airliner. An aircraft of this size would have to land on water as a
titanic "flying boat".


*The Biggest Planes Flying Today*

Unlike the B-29 and the B-52, which don’t show their size easily, the *C-5
Galaxy* would look insanely monstrous even on a postage stamp. To give you
an idea of the Galaxy’s size, its wingspan is not just longer than the
Wright Brothers’ first flight but the beast can also haul 180,000 pounds
(which is about 90 tons). The C-5 was the world's largest plane when it was
introduced in the late 1960s.

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(image credit: Pervez Iqbal)
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Arguably the biggest plane flying today, or ever, is *Antonov An-225*, a
6-engine beast that’s not only longer than the first flight in history but
could probably carry one, two, or three whole aircraft museums. Numbers
don’t mean much but here is an impressive one: the 225 can carry 550,000
pounds, which is 275 tons. Yes, you can say WOW.

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(image credit: Dmitry Pichugin)
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(image credit: Radek Oneksiak)
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(image credit: airliners.net)
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(images via)

This is a good dimension-comparison chart:

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(image via)

When it comes to passenger aviation, Airbus A-380 is the current leader in
size: this image shows its comparative size among other planes in the
airport -

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We used to have the Roc, the Garuda bird, the Thunderbird, Blue Crow, and
other soaring myths. Now we have machines; airplanes so big they’re even
greater than those ancient, and magnificent, dreams. Of course, there is
another advantage to premium size - you can always claim your piece of the
sky, and outright own the airstrip:

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(image credit: Sven De Bevere)


"Patience and perseverance have a magical effect before which difficulties
disappear and obstacles vanish" - John Quincy Adams

Vanakkam Subbu

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