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X-plane

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The X-planes are a series of experimental United States aircraft (and some rockets) used for testing of new technologies and usually kept highly secret during development.

The first of these, the Bell X-1, became well-known as the first plane to break the sound barrier, which it did in 1947. Later X-planes yielded important research results, but only the North American X-15 rocket plane of the early 1960s achieved comparable fame. X-planes 7 through 12 were actually missiles, and some other vehicles were unpiloted. Most X-planes are not expected to ever go into full-scale production, and usually only a few are produced. One exception is the Lockheed Martin X-35, which competed against the Boeing X-32 to become the Joint Strike Fighter.

As of 2006, new X-plane projects are still underway. The designation X-52 was skipped to avoid potential confusion with the operational B-52 Stratofortress strategic bomber.

[edit] List of X-planes

Name Manufacturer Image Maiden flight Notes
X-1 Bell Aircraft January 19, 1946 First aircraft to break the sound barrier
X-2 Starbuster Bell Aircraft June 27, 1952 Supersonic plane Mach 2 - Mach 3
X-3 Stiletto Douglas Aircraft Corporation June 27, 1952 Supersonic plane using titanium alloy
X-4 Bantam Northrop Corporation December 15, 1948 Replace horizontal tail with elevons
X-5 Bell Aircraft June 20, 1951 Variable-sweep wing design
X-6 Convair 1955 Study Nuclear aircraft
X-7 Flying Stove Pipe Lockheed Corporation April 1951 Test ramjet engines
X-8 Aerobee Aerojet Missile test platform
X-9 Shrike Bell Aircraft April 1949 Testbed for the nuclear-armed GAM-63 Rascal
X-10 North American Aviation October 13, 1953 Demonstrator for advanced missile technologies
X-11 Convair June 11, 1957 Testbed for the Atlas missile program
X-12 Convair July, 1958 Advanced testbed for the Atlas missile program
X-13 Vertijet Ryan Aeronautical Company December 10, 1955 Demonstrate the ability of a pure jet to vertically takeoff, hover, transition to horizontal forward flight, and vertically land
X-14 Bell Aircraft February 19, 1957 Demonstrate horizontal, vertical takeoff, hover, transition to forward flight, and vertical landing.
X-15 North American Aviation June 8, 1959 Research hypersonic flight (Mach 6)
X-16 Bell Aircraft Never flew High altitude reconnaissance aircraft
X-17 Lockheed Corporation April 1956 Effects of high mach reentry
X-18 Hiller Aircraft November 24, 1959 Tiltwing and STOVL
X-19 Curtiss-Wright November 1963 VTOL transport plane with Tiltrotor
X-20 Dyna-Soar Boeing Never flew Reusable spaceplane for military missions
X-21 Northrop Corporation April 18, 1963 Test wings with laminar flow control
X-22 Bell Aircraft March 17, 1966 STOVL plane with tiltrotor
X-23 PRIME Martin Marietta December 21, 1966 Atmospheric reentry effects tests
X-24 PILOT Martin Marietta
August 1, 1973 Lifting body plane
X-25 Bensen B-8 Bensen December 6, 1955 Light autogyro
X-26 Frigate Schweizer
1967 Motor glider
X-27 Lockheed Never flew High performance fighter prototype
X-28 Sea Skimmer Periera August 12, 1970 ULM sailboat
X-29 Grumman 1984 forward-swept wing test plane
X-30 NASP Rockwell Never built Commercial spaceplane prototype
X-31 Rockwell 1990 Thrust vectoring fighter
X-32 Boeing September 2000 Fighter both conventional, STOVL and marine
X-33 Venture Star Lockheed Martin Never ended Prototype Reusable spaceplane
X-34 Orbital Sciences Never flew Reusable unmanned spaceplane
X-35 JSF Lockheed Martin 2000 Fighter both conventional, STOVL and marine
X-36 McDonnell Douglas May 17, 1997 Tailless aircraft
X-37 Future X Boeing April 7, 2006 Experimental orbital vehicle
X-38 CRV NASA 1999 CRV (=Crew Return Vehicle) with lifting body
X-39 ???? Classified Not yet FATE : Future Aircraft Technology Enhancements
X-40 SMV Boeing August 11, 1998 SMV=Space Maneuver Vehicle
X-41 Common Aero Vehicle ???? Classified Reentry vehicle with commercial load
X-42 ???? Classified Liquid propeller military rocket
X-43 NASA June 2, 2001 Scramjet hypersonic Drone
X-44 MANTA Lockheed Martin Prototype not completed MANTA=Multi-Axis No-Tail Aircraft with thrust vectoring
X-45 Boeing
22/5/2002 Demonstrator of unmanned combat air vehicle (UCAV)
X-46 Boeing X-45 marine version for an unmanned combat air vehicle
X-47 Pegasus Grumman February 23, 2003 Demonstrator of naval unmanned combat air vehicle (UCAV)
X-48 Boeing July 20, 2007 Blended Wing Body (BWB) flying wing
X-49 Speedhawk Piasecki Aircraft July 29, 2007 Fast helicopter VDTP (Vectored Thrust Ducted Propeller)
X-50 Boeing 24 November 2003 Demonstrate the principle that a helicopter's rotor can be stopped in flight and act as a fixed wing
X-51 Waverider Pratt & Whitney et Boeing (Scheduled) 2009 Test Scramjet engines
X-52 # not used (to avoid confusion with Boeing B-52 Stratofortress)
X-53 Boeing Phantom Works November 2002 AAW : Active Aeroelastic Wing

[edit] In fiction

Many movies, television series and video games have featured fictional X planes, with both feasible and currently infeasible designs. For instance, the Stargate TV series feature X-301, X-302, X-303, and X-304 spacecraft. The movie Armageddon featured two top-secret space shuttles called X-71.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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