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Flight airspeed record

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Determining the fastest aircraft in the world is difficult, because of the wide variety of designs. For example, most high-speed aircraft are unable to take off under their own power, requiring a carrier aircraft.

The Space Shuttle is the fastest aircraft, reaching speeds of 17,500 miles per hour. During reentry when it flies at its highest speed it is a glider, relying on residual speed from being in orbit. It is unable to take off under its own power, requiring two solid rocket boosters and a discardable fuel tank to reach orbit. During ascent the airspeed is under Mach 2 whilst in what would normally be considered to be the atmosphere; the Shuttle leaves the atmosphere as soon as possible, and fairly plausibly isn't an aircraft as most people would consider the term on the way to orbit.

The Boeing X-43A is the fastest air-breathing aircraft, having set a speed record of 11,200 km/h (7,000 mph), or Mach 9.68, on November 16, 2004. However, it is unmanned, and relies on a carrier aircraft to reach altitude, and a discardable booster rocket to reach the operating speed of its scramjet engine. It is also incapable of landing.

The rocket-powered X-15 was the fastest powered, manned aircraft, reaching a top speed of 7,274 km/h (4,510 mph) on October 3, 1967. However, it was rocket-powered, carrying both fuel and oxidizer. It requires a carrier aircraft to take off.

The SR-71 "Blackbird" is usually considered to have been the fastest "conventional" aircraft, with a sustained top speed of 3,529.56 km/h (2,188 mph). It was a manned aircraft powered by air-breathing engines, and was capable of taking off and landing unassisted on conventional runways.

Timeline

Records as recognised by FAI and predecessor organizations.


From this point records are set at alitude and not sea level.

  • 1955 Horace A Hanes 822.13 mph (first supersonic for a jet) in [[F-100 Super Sabre

|North American F-100C Super Sabre]], Palmdale, USA

  • 1956 Peter Twiss 1132.13 mph in Fairey Delta Two, Chichester, GB
  • 1965 Robert L Stephens & Daniel Andre 2,070.10 mph in Lockheed YF-12A, Edwards AFB, USA
  • 1967 X-15 at 4,510 miles per hour (7,274 km/h)
  • 1986 Westland Lynx set helicopter world speed record of 400.87 km/h (249.09 mp/h)
  • 2004 NASA's X-43A hypersonic aircraft at 4,780mph (seven times the speed of sound)

From Record List.

See also