An air speed record is the highest airspeed attained by an aircraft of a particular class. The rules for all official aviation records are defined by Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI),[1] which also ratifies any claims. Speed records are divided into multiple classes with sub-divisions. There are three classes of aircraft: landplanes, seaplanes and amphibians; then within these classes, there are records for aircraft in a number of weight categories. There are still further sub-divisions for piston-engined, turbojet, turboprop and rocket-engined aircraft. Within each of these groups, records are defined for speed over a straight course and for closed circuits of various sizes carrying various payloads. There are still further records for the speed between specified cities such as London and New York.
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Date | Pilot | Airspeed | Aircraft | Location | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
mph | km/h | ||||
1903 | Wilbur Wright | 6.82 | 10.98 | Wright Flyer | Kitty Hawk, NC, USA |
1905 | Wilbur Wright | 37.85 | 60.91 | Wright Flyer III | |
12 November 1906 | Alberto Santos-Dumont | 25.65 | 41.292 | 14-bis | First officially recognised airspeed record[2] |
26 October 1907 | Henry Farman | 32.73 | 52.700 | Voisin biplane | [2] |
25 May 1909 | P Tissander | 34.04 | 54.810 | Wright | [2] |
23 August 1909 | Glenn Curtiss | 43.367 | 69.821 | Curtiss No. 2 | 1909 Gordon Bennett Cup, Reims, France[2][3] |
24 August 1909 | Louis Blériot | 46.160 | 74.318 | Blériot XI | [2] |
28 August 1909 | Louis Blériot | 47.823 | 76.995 | Blériot XI | [2] |
23 April 1910 | Hubert Latham | 48.186 | 77.579 | Antoinette | [2] |
10 July 1910 | L Morane | 66.154 | 106.508 | Blériot | [2] |
29 October 1910 | Alfred Leblanc | 68.171 | 109.756 | Blériot XI | [2] |
12 April 1911 | Alfred Leblanc | 69.442 | 111.801 | Blériot Blériot | [2] |
11 May 1911 | Edouard Nieuport | 73.385 | 119.760 | Nieuport | [2] |
12 June 1911 | Alfred Leblanc | 77.640 | 125.000 | Blériot | [2] |
16 June 1911 | Edouard Nieuport | 80.781 | 130.057 | Nieuport | [2] |
21 June 1911 | Edouard Nieuport | 82.693 | 133.136 | Nieuport Nie-2 N | [2] |
13 January 1912 | Jules Vedrines | 87.68 | 145.161 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
22 February 1912 | Jules Vedrines | 100.18 | 161.290 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
29 February 1912 | Jules Vedrines | 100.90 | 162.454 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
1 March 1912 | Jules Vedrines | 103.62 | 166.821 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
2 March 1912 | Jules Vedrines | 104.29 | 167.910 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
13 July 1912 | Jules Vedrines | 106.07 | 170.777 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
9 September 1912 | Jules Vedrines | 108.14 | 174.100 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
17 June 1913 | Maurice Prévost | 111.69 | 179.820 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
27 September 1913 | Maurice Prévost | 119.19 | 191.897 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
29 September 1913 | Maurice Prévost | 126.61 | 203.850 | Deperdussin Monocoque | [2] |
1914 | Norman Spratt | 134.5 | 216.5 | RAF SE.4 | |
August 1918 | Roland Rohlfs | 163 | 262.3 | Curtiss Wasp | [4] Not officially recognised. |
1919 | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | 191.1 | 307.5 | Nieuport-Delage 29v | |
8 February 1920 | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | 171.0 | 275.264 | Nieuport-Delage NiD 29 | Villacoublay, France.[5] First official record post World War 1.[2] |
28 February 1920 | J Casale | 176.1 | 283.464 | Spad-Herbemont | Villacoublay, France[2][6] |
9 October 1920 | Bernard de Romanet | 181.8 | 292.682 | Spad-Herbemont | Buc, France[2][7] |
10 October 1920 | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | 184.3 | 296.694 | Nieuport-Delage 29 | [2] |
20 October 1920 | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | 187.9 | 302.529 | Nieuport-Delage 29 | [2] |
4 November 1920 | Bernard de Romanet | 191.9 | 309.012 | Spad S.20 | Buc, France[2][8] |
12 December 1920 | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | 194.4 | 313.043 | Nieuport-Delage 29 | [2] |
26 September 1921 | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | 205.2 | 330.275 | Nieuport-Delage | [9] |
13 October 1922 | Billy Mitchell | 222.88 | 358.836 | Curtiss R | Detroit[2][10] |
18 October 1922 | Billy Mitchell | 224.28 | 360.93 | Curtiss R-6 | [11][12] |
15 February 1923 | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | 232.91 | 375.00 | Nieuport-Delage | Istres[10] |
29 March 1923 | Russell Maughan | 236.587 | 380.74 | Curtiss R-6 | [13][14] |
2 November 1923 | H. J. Rowe | 259.16 | 417.07 | Curtiss R2C-1 | [15] |
4 November 1923 | Alford J. Williams | 266.59 | 429.02 | Curtiss R2C-1 | [15][16] |
11 November 1924 | Florentin Bonnet | 278.37 | 448.171 | Bernard-Ferbois V.2 | [2] |
4 November 1927 | Mario de Bernardi | 297.70 | 479.290 | Macchi M.52 seaplane | Venice, Database ID 11828 [1] [2] |
30 March 1928 | Mario de Bernardi | 318.620 | 512.776 | Macchi M.52bis seaplane | Venice, Database ID 11827 [1] [17] |
July 1929 | Giuseppe Motta | 362.0 | 582.6 | Macchi M.67 seaplane | Unofficial |
10 September 1929 | George H. Stainforth | 336.3 | 541.4 | Gloster VI seaplane | Calshot, Database ID 11829,[1] [18] |
12 September 1929 | Augustus Orlebar | 357.7 | 575.5 | Supermarine S.6 seaplane | Calshot,Database ID 11830 [1] [19] |
13 September 1931 | George H. Stainforth | 407.5 | 655.8 | Supermarine S.6B seaplane | Lee-on-the-Solent, Database ID 11831 [1] [20] |
10 April 1933 | Francesco Agello | 423.6 | 682.078 | Macchi M.C.72 seaplane | Desenzano del Garda, Database ID 11836 [1] [2] |
23 October 1934 | Francesco Agello | 440.5 | 709.209 | Macchi M.C.72 seaplane | Desenzano del Garda, Database ID 4497 [1][2] |
1935 | Howard Hughes | 352 | 566 | Hughes H-1 Racer landplane – Not an Official FAI record | |
26 April 1939 | Fritz Wendel | 469.220 | 755.138 | Me 209 V1 - Piston-engined record until 1969 | Augsburg[21] |
1941 | Heini Dittmar | 623.65 | 1003.67 | Rocket powered – Not an Official FAI record but over the 3 km FAI distance Messerschmitt Me 163A V4 | Peenemünde[22][23][24] |
1944 | Heinz Herlitzius | 624 | 1004 | Not an Official FAI record Messerschmitt Me 262 S2 | Leipheim [25] |
1944 | Heini Dittmar | 702 | 1130 | Rocket powered – Not an Official FAI record Messerschmitt Me 163B V18 | Lagerlechfeld [25] |
7 November 1945 | H. J. Wilson | 606.4 | 975.9 | Gloster Meteor F Mk4 | Herne Bay, UK[26] |
7 September 1946 | Edward Mortlock Donaldson | 615.78 | 990.79 | Gloster Meteor F Mk4 | Littlehampton, UK[26] |
19 June 1947 | Col. Albert Boyd | 623.74 | 1003.60 | Lockheed P-80R Shooting Star | Muroc, California, USA[27] |
20 August 1947 | Cmdr. Turner Caldwell | 640.663 | 1031.049 | Douglas Skystreak | Muroc, California, USA[28] |
25 August 1947 | Major Marion Eugene Carl USMC | 650.796 | 1047.356 | Douglas Skystreak | Muroc, California, USA[28] |
1947 | Chuck Yeager | 670.0 | 1078 | Bell X-1 – Rocket powered – Not an official FAI C-1 record | Muroc, California,
USA |
15 September 1948 | Maj. Richard L. Johnson, USAF | 670.84 | 1079.6 | North American F-86A-3 Sabre | Cleveland, USA[29][2] |
18 November 1952 | J. Slade Nash | 698.505 | 1,124.13 | North American F-86D Sabre | Salton Sea, USA[30] |
1953 | William Barnes | 715.745 | 1,151.88 | North American F-86D Sabre | Salton Sea, USA[31] |
7 September 1953 | Neville Duke | 727.6 | 1,171 | Hawker Hunter F Mk3 | Littlehampton, UK[32] |
26 September 1953 | Mike Lithgow | 735.7 | 1,184 | Supermarine Swift F4 | Castel Idris, Tripoli, Libya[33] |
3 October 1953 | James B. Verdin, US Navy | 752.9 | 1,211.5 | Douglas F4D Skyray | Salton Sea, USA[34] |
October 1953 | Frank K. Everest USAF | 755.1 | 1,215.3 | North American F-100 Super Sabre | Salton Sea, USA |
From this point records are set at altitude and not sea level. | |||||
October 1955 | Horace A. Hanes | 822.1 | 1,323 | North American F-100C Super Sabre | Palmdale, USA |
10 March 1956 | Peter Twiss | 1,132 | 1,822 | Fairey Delta 2 | Chichester, UK[35] |
December 1957 | USAF | 1,207.6 | 1,943.5 | McDonnell F-101A Voodoo | Edwards Air Force Base, USA[36] |
May 1958 | Cap. WW Irwin, USAF | 1,404 | 2,259.5 | Lockheed F-104C Starfighter | Edwards Air Force Base, USA |
31 October 1959 | Col. Georgii Mosolov | 1,484 | 2,388 | Ye-66 (proto Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21) | USSR[37] |
December 1959 | Maj. Joseph Rogers, USAF | 1,525.9 | 2,455.7 | Convair F-106 Delta Dart | Edwards Air Force Base, USA |
22 November 1961 | Robert G. Robinson, US Navy | 1606.3 | 2585.1 | Modified McDonnell-Douglas F-4 Phantom II | Edwards Air Force Base, USA[38] |
7 July 1962 | Col. Georgii Mosolov | 1665.9 | 2681 | Mikoyan Gurevich Ye-166 – name adopted for the record attempt, originally a version of a Ye-152 | USSR[21][39] |
1 May 1965 | Robert L. Stephens and Daniel Andre |
2,070.1 | 3,331.5 | Lockheed YF-12A | Edwards AFB, USA[40] |
28 July 1976 | Capt. Eldon W. Joersz and Maj. George T. Morgan | 2,193.2 | 3,529.6 | Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird #61-7958 | Beale AFB, USA[41] |
The Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird holds the official Air Speed Record for a manned airbreathing jet aircraft with a speed of 3,530 km/h (2,193 mph). It was capable of taking off and landing unassisted on conventional runways. The record was set on 28 July 1976 by Eldon W. Joersz and George T. Morgan Jr. near Beale Air Force Base, California, USA.[42]
Although the official record for fastest piston-engined aeroplane in level flight is held by a Grumman F8F Bearcat, the Rare Bear, with a speed of 528.31 mph (850.24 km/h), the unofficial record for fastest piston-engined aeroplane in level flight is a held by a British Hawker Sea Fury at 547 mph. Whereas these were both demilitarised, modified fighters, the fastest piston-engined aeroplane in stock (original, factory-built) condition was the German Dornier Do 335 Pfeil, with a maximum speed of 474 mph (765 km/h) in level flight. The unofficial record for fastest piston-engined aeroplane (not in level flight) is held by a Supermarine Spitfire Mk IXX, which was calculated to have achieved a speed of 690 mph (1,110 km/h, Mach 0.96) in a dive on 5 February 1952.
For a period of time, during and immediately following World War II, the unpublicised and unofficial speed record of 1004.5 km/h (623.8 mph) set by the Messerschmitt Me 163AV4 (the third prototype) rocket aircraft, on October 2, 1941 was actually the fastest velocity any aircraft had been measured as traveling to that time. That figure, set during wartime when no records were being ratified, was achieved by the Me 163A V4 at altitude rather than sea-level as it had been towed by a Bf 110 to set the record. Many record attempts were stated as being "set" after World War II by such aircraft as the Gloster Meteor, which exceeded the 755 km/h (469 mph) velocity record of the pre-war holder (the Messerschmitt Me 209 V1 piston-engined aircraft) but the first to actually exceed the Me 163 A V4 claim was the Douglas Skystreak on August 20, 1947.
The fastest manned atmospheric vehicle of all time was the Apollo command module as it returned from the moon, reaching speeds of around Mach 30. Although it used the air largely as a brake, it did also achieve a lift to drag ratio of around 0.368[43] which was used to control the flight trajectory. However this is probably very different from most people's idea of an 'aircraft'.
Year | Pilot | Airspeed | Aircraft | Comments | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
mph | km/h | ||||
1960 | Ivan Soukhomline (USSR) | 541.45 | 871.38 | Tupolev Tu-114 | Fastest propeller-driven aircraft |
1967 | 'Pete' Knight | 4,519 | 7,274 | North American X-15 | Rocket plane; incapable of breathing air |
1981-2011 | Multiple | 17,500 | 28,000 | Space Shuttle | Speed attained during atmospheric reentry |
August 11, 1986 | John Egginton | 249.1 | 400.87 | Westland Lynx 800 G-LYNX | Fastest helicopter[44] |
December 31, 1988 | L.P. Krantov | 258.8 | 415 | Tupolev Tu-134A | Fastest landing speed record (76 passengers aboard, no one harmed)[45] |
August 21, 1989 | Lyle Shelton | 528 | 850 | F8F Bearcat Rare Bear | Fastest straight-line piston-engined aircraft |
November 16, 2004 | Unmanned | 7,546 | 12,144 | NASA X-43A | Air-launched hypersonic scramjet |
December 22, 2006 | Klaus Ohlmann & Matias Garcia Mazzaro | 190.6 | 306.8 | Schempp-Hirth Nimbus-4DM | Fastest glider (sailplane) over 500km[46] |
September 15, 2010 | Kevin Bredenbeck | 299 | 481 | Sikorsky X2 | Fastest compound helicopter (unofficial)[47] |
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