The Biggest Plane Ever Built Was Destroyed, But You Can Help Rebuild It
Now, there's an opportunity for people to help fund a rebuild and get a taste of what flying An-225 Mriya was like at the same time - virtually of course.
Read MoreNow, there's an opportunity for people to help fund a rebuild and get a taste of what flying An-225 Mriya was like at the same time - virtually of course.
Read MoreThe Air Force has amassed an aresenal of the most advanced machines on the planet. These famous vehicles of the Air Force have the most ridiculous features.
Read MoreThe P-3 Orion first entered service in 1962, and its initial mission was to detect and intercept Soviet submarines.
Read MoreDuring the Vietnam War, the U.S. military made diligent use of a capable aircraft that provided great maneuverability and visibility over the battlefield.
Read MoreAn unusual "ground effect" vehicle designed by the Soviet Union washed ashore in Derbent, Russia in 2020, but even though it's man-made, it's still a monster.
Read MoreRavens are well-known as smart tricksters. EF-111A Raven, then, is a very appropriate name for a warplane that had a unique role: as a mobile signal jammer.
Read MoreThe S3-A Viking was originally built to be a submarine hunter but this versatile aircraft actually saw a lot of different uses during its lifetime.
Read MoreThe USAF needed a strategic bomber that could operate at long range while outrunning enemy planes and carrying a nuclear payload. Enter the XB-70 Valkyrie.
Read MoreIn the early days of aeronautical travel, an Italian designer wanted to push the envelope of commercial air travel, but the concept was ahead of the technology.
Read MoreDuring the Cold War, the United States created a spy plane unparalleled in its ability to conduct surveillance - at mach 3, and well above the atmosphere.
Read MoreWhile technically unmanned aircraft have been around for centuries, military drones as we know them today weren't actively used until The Great War.
Read MoreGround support hangs around the battle space and provides support to soldiers as long as it is needed. The premier U.S. ground attack aircraft is The Warthog.
Read MoreDuring the Cold War, the U.S. Air Force designed an aeronautical wonder, capable of supersonic speeds, massive altitude, and could wield nuclear payloads.
Read MoreJust before the Concorde took to the skies, the Soviet Union made its own ill-fated version of a supersonic passenger jet called the Tupolev Tu-144.
Read MoreThe Army's ongoing study of the shrimp's movement could open up a field of applications for the simple spring-under-pressure principle.
Read MoreA series of tests toward the end of 2022 proved that AI is now, to some degree, capable of unmanned aircraft flight in a tactical/military scenario.
Read MoreIf anything challenges the air control over the U.S., in this case a Chinese surveillance balloon or a UFO, the F-22 is there to stop it.
Read MoreThe X-15 was the first plane to reach the 100,000-foot mark and fly at hypersonic speeds beyond Mach 4, 5, and 6.
Read MoreThe historic flight marks not just the Super Bowl, but the 50-year anniversary of women getting the green light to train as pilots in the U.S. Navy.
Read MoreThe most significant airplane of its generation wasn't a fancy warplane or fighter jet. Rather, it laid the foundation for modern air travel for years to come.
Read MoreBack in WWII, the Royal Air Force needed a new plane that could do basically anything. The DH 98 Mosquito was the answer they were looking for.
Read MoreVertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) aircraft known as "tail-sitters," if proven successful, would basically do away with the need for runaways.
Read MoreGoodyear kicked out the first prototype Inflatoplane (GA-33) in a mere 12 days to help rescue downed pilots.
Read MoreThe U.S. Air Force is getting close to the launch of its newest supersonic training jet, the T-7A Red Hawk. The tech inside sounds very impressive.
Read MoreThe Concorde was a technological marvel that allowed people to fly across the Atlantic Ocean in less than four hours -- how did such a speedy sensation fail?
Read MoreRobert Oros di Bartini, after studying conventional plains, trains, and automobiles, believed the best method of transportation was an "ekranoplan."
Read MoreDuring World War II, Germany and the Axis powers experimented with multiple different prototype weapons during wartime — one of which was the 'Kugelpanzer.'
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