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Five historic flying wing aircraft that shaped aviation history
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Horten Ho 229 | Wikipedia

The Northrop B-2 Spirit stealth bomber, introduced in 1997, captured global attention with its unique flying wing design. Since then, the United States has developed various autonomous flying wing aircraft, including the secretive RQ-170 and RQ-180. The U.S. Air Force is also working on the Northrop-Grumman B-21 Raider stealth bomber. Although the Navy's A-12 Avenger II flying wing was canceled post-Cold War, flying wing designs have been explored since the 1920s.

One such design was the Westland-Hill Pterodactyl from the United Kingdom. Designed by Captain Geoffrey T.R. Hill in collaboration with Westland Aircraft, five models were built as experimental tailless aircraft in the 1920s and early 1930s. Despite efforts to create fighter versions like the Pterodactyl V, which featured a Rolls-Royce Goshawk engine and Vickers machine guns, production did not proceed due to other issues. The Royal Aeronautical Society noted Hill's intention "to improve safety in flight" amidst frequent accidents in the Royal Air Force.

Another British attempt was the Armstrong Whitworth A.W.52, an experimental flying wing that first flew on November 13, 1947. Built by Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft in the late 1940s, two jet-powered prototypes were constructed alongside a glider model to explore design feasibility. According to the Warwickshire Industrial Archeological Society, "the AW 52 glider was entirely made of wood," while aluminum was used for turbojet-powered prototypes.

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Germany's Horten Ho 229 stands out as one of WWII's notable flying wing projects. Developed by Walter and Reimar Horten during WWII, it became one of the first jet-powered flying wings intended as a fighter/bomber prototype. As stated by the National Air and Space Museum: "In 1943...Hermann Göring allocated half-a-million Reich Marks" for development despite technical challenges leading to its crash after several test flights.

The United States' Northrop YB-35/XB-35 project aimed at creating a strategic bomber using a flying-wing configuration during WWII and shortly thereafter. Powered by Pratt & Whitney engines and armed with M3 Browning machine guns, this American endeavor saw limited success with only fourteen prototypes built before cancellation.

Building on this work came Northrop's YB-49 development—transitioning from propeller-driven designs to jet power with three prototypes completed by converting existing airframes into YB-49 configurations featuring Allison TG-180 (J35) turbojets according to information from The National Museum of The United States Air Force: "Two YB-35s were modified..." Despite promising performance results during testing phases; however stability issues led ultimately toward abandonment until later revivals such as today's B2 Spirit.

Organizations Included in this History
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