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A lot of thought has gone into the fictional aircraft that have appeared in books, films and TV shows. This is a tribute to the clever and imaginative people who have put their aviation know-how to use in producing flying ‘stars’. These aircraft are characters in their own right, and have entered the consciousness of millions. It was hard to select only ten, but here is Hush-Kit’s selection.
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Was the Spitfire overrated? Full story here. A Lightning pilot’s guide to flying and fighting here. Find out the most effective modern fighter aircraft in within-visual and beyond-visual range combat. The greatest fictional aircraft here. An interview with stealth guru Bill Sweetman here. The fashion of aircraft camo here. Interview with a Super Hornet pilot here. Most importantly, a pacifist’s guide to warplanes here. F-35 expose here.Â
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10. BAC TSR.2MS
Ridiculous and wonderful, the TSR.2MS is featured in the Japanese cartoon Stratos-4. It is a mad, rocket-assisted tribute to a real-world cancelled bomber. In Stratos-4 the TSR2.MS is an ultra-fast interceptor, that can be launched from the back of a truck. The creators also considered the CF-105 Arrow for the part! Click here for more on TSR.2
9. AT-99 Scorpion
The AT-99 Scorpion featured in Avatar, and was a chimera of several real-world aircraft. The cockpit is reminiscent of the AH-1W, the weapons are based on real types and the fuselage has elements of the Kiowa. The ducted rotors are an interesting touch, and have featured on several small UAVs as well as flying cars, including the Israeli X-Hawk (which looks like it may have been a muse for the AT-99). The tail is similar to that of the He-162 Salamander. The AT-99 is a fascinating ‘mash-up’.
8. Blue Thunder
Take a Gazelle helicopter, bolt on a load of prosthetics and you have Blue Thunder. The star of the 1983 film was apparently a dog to fly due to the extra weight required to ‘dress’Â it to look like an advanced gunship helicopter.
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7. Angel Interceptor
From the British puppet show Captain Scarlet, the Angel interceptor was a VTOL supersonic fighter. The type has an airspike on the nose (a good idea for hypersonic flight) and a ‘wave-riding’ wing. Clever stuff.
6. Air Wolf
Like Blue Thunder, Air Wolf was another transvestite helicopter (I wish I could think of a good pun to describe that). Air Wolf was a 1980s TV show starring a dressed-up Bell 222. The helicopter was eventually sold after the show ended and became an ambulance helicopter in Germany. Sadly, it crashed in a thunderstorm on June 6, 1992, killing all three on board.
5. F/A-37
The 2005 film Stealth featured the F/A-37 fighter-bomber. The concept is clearly based on the ‘Switchblade’ patent filed by Grumman in 1999 for a Mach 3 capable stealth aircraft. The ‘Switchblade’ used extreme variable-geometry and was a very radical notion. The F/A-37 combines Switchblade-like features with elements of the YF-23 to produce a visually convincing idea.
4. Mikoyan MiG-37B ‘Ferret-E’
In 1987, the faceted stealth design of the F-117 was highly classified. So, there were some very unhappy people at the Pentagon when model kit maker Testor released their MiG-37. This notional Soviet stealth fighter used a faceted shape to reduce its radar cross-section and a shielding trough to reduce its heat signature, painfully close to the then top-secret F-117. A naughty and well-informed prediction! Click here for the story of Russian stealth.
3. Carreidas 160
Tintin featured many wonderful real-world aircraft, including the Arado Ar 196 and de Havilland Mosquito, it also featured one of the very best fictional aeroplanes. The Tintin book Flight 714 featured a Hergé creation, a gloriously well conceived swing-wing supersonic business jet with three engines. Flight 714 came out in 1968, a year before Concorde flew, at a time when supersonic civil aircraft were a very hot topic. The central engine was fed through a bifurcated intake inboard of the outer inlets.
2. Lockheed F-19 Stealth fighter
In the early 1980s, observers found it odd that the F/A-18 was followed by the F-20. What was the F-19? Rumours of secret stealth aircraft were hot gossip at the time. The two exciting ideas were put together leading to the crypto-aeronautical F-19. It appeared in the 1983 ‘Deal Of The Century’ with Chevy Chase as a cranked delta, with outward canted fins. In 1986 Testor released a model kit, of an aircraft with a plectrum shaped blended wing/body and inward-canted fins, this become the archetypal F-19 image. A ‘Northrop-Loral F-19A Specter’ magazine advert did little to quell the F-19-mania, but the outing of the F-117 ‘stealth fighter’ in 1988 ended this enjoyable trend.
The winner is course- Firefox. Rumour has it that Clint Eastwood originally wanted to cast the Saab Viggen, but it proved cheaper to use dodgy special effects. The resultant ‘Firefox’ was an exciting shape, with four engine intakes and a canard and cranked-delta wing design. With thought control and energy weapons, ‘Firefox’ was ahead technologically of even today’s F-35. Our winner also had a small amount of faceting on its nose and transparencies, but this appears to be for aesthetic reasons rather than hinting at a stealth insight. The 1982 film Firefox was based on a novel of the same name by Craig Thomas, in the novel however, the type looked similar to the MiG-25, as does the real MiG-31. Firefox was released at a time when real, new Soviet fighters were secretive and mysterious, and the film perfectly exploited this sexy mystique.
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the Carreidas 160 … the center engine was fed by a bifurcated intake located between the outboard engines and the fuselage
Thanks Gordon,
I had a suspicion that may be the case. Does it mention this in the book?
No it doesn’t, but it was clearly drawn in such way to hint this system.
Fantastic stuff and, interestingly, one of those mentioned will ‘return’ to the skies very soon, in the UK!
I assume Gareth it is either Blue Thunder or Air Wolf!!
Bit slow off the mark here but I think the best fictional aircraft is the Savoia S.21 from the film ‘Porco Rosso’. Here it is: http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?um=1&hl=en&biw=1257&bih=620&tbm=isch&tbnid=tm1vmbosdX4XpM:&imgrefurl=http://studioghibliaircraftanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/04/porco-rosso-aircraft.html&docid=84N2LsI-FIlSGM&imgurl=http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-9LYF-rZrRkE/TbQPOOPWumI/AAAAAAAAAAM/gHcCg6K0KxA/s1600/porco_rosso_movie_image_01.jpg&w=1600&h=1096&ei=pjEhUMSHLsWp0QW554CYDQ&zoom=1&iact=rc&dur=410&sig=105392655455708397258&page=1&tbnh=117&tbnw=171&start=0&ndsp=17&ved=1t:429,r:4,s:0,i:82&tx=107&ty=63
The sad thing about that is that it displaces information about a real plane by that designation. And I think it’s pretty clear that the people who came up with the fictional one were aware of the real one, since there’s a certain resemblance.
http://modelingmadness.com/scott/preww2/finemolds/savoias21.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SIAI_S.21
Excellent post! I may need to review some of my pages to make sure we’ve got them matched up. I want that movie poster!
[…] Regardless, it looked to many observers that MiG-37 seemed the most likely designation for the first Soviet stealth fighter. As the text points out “In the autumn of 1987, the US plastic model manufacturer Testor.. launched its model of the “MiG-37B Ferret Eâ€- a Soviet equivalent to the Lockheed stealth fighter. Its appearance must have caused a few smiles around the Mikoyan design bureau. As its manufacturer admitted.. Its reception in the Pentagon must have been less amusing. Here in widely-distributed form was the first model to widely illustrate the use of RCS reduction technique.†(more on Testor’s MiG-37 can be seen here). […]
[…]  The judges were: Hush-Kit’s Joe Coles, Combat Aircraft‘s Thomas Newdick, the RAF Review‘s Paul Eden, The Aviation Historian‘s Nick Stroud and the artist Ed Ward. If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Swedish, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic- try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Swedish, Australian, Japanese, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic- try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…]  If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Swedish, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…]  If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten French, Swedish, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…]  If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Swedish, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…]  If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] 3. Curtiss R3C-4 2. de Havilland Dragon Rapide  1. Gloster IV If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Swedish, Australian,  Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] If you enjoy this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] If you enjoy this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Australian,  Soviet and aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] Japanese , Belgian, German and Latin American aeroplanes. Want something more bizarre? The Top Ten fictional aircraft is a fascinating […]
[…] The really good ones have big rails on the outside of the fuselage to hang onto and a step to stand on if the door is quite short. I’ve stopped skydiving now, as I started getting really scared after 600 jumps, but I still remember the smell of Jet-A burning in the morning. Smells of free fall… If you enjoy this, have a look at the top ten French, Swedish, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic? Try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] Fighters are flown by handsome men with unprofessional attitudes and innate skills. Their main use is to kill space ships, communists or Nazis. Wingmen die. Every fighter plot has an equally skilled nemesis and a psychological flaw. Formations are always close, pilots can be white, black or fat, occasionally female, but not East Asian. Fighter pilots celebrate surviving a dangerous mission by flying in a dangerous way. Here’s some great fictional aircraft. […]
What a great website: Hushkit gets mass quantities of kudos for his wonderful contribution to aviation. My small contribution is a scintillating memoir of a radically adventuresome 36-year aviation career (www.therogueaviator.com), Allen Morris/aka Ace Abbott (pen name)
Most (if not all) the Porco Rosso aircraft were based on Schneider Trophy aircraft. I’m just rather surprised that Fireflash from Thunderbirds didn’t make the cut – or even Thunderbirds 1 or 2.
[…] The judges were: Hush-Kit’s Joe Coles, Combat Aircraft‘s Thomas Newdick, the RAF Review‘s Paul Eden, The Aviation Historian‘s Nick Stroud and the artist Ed Ward. If you enjoyed this, have a look at the top ten British, French, Swedish, Australian, Soviet and German aeroplanes. Wanting Something a little more exotic- try the top ten fictional aircraft. […]
[…] Top Ten fictional aircraft here […]
Do you think it might be possible to build a real, flyable, AT-99?
There are some great planes on here, but it sounds like “The Ten Best Ficional Aircraft Since 1980, Plus a Token Plane from Later Tin Tin” or something. The golden age of fictional aircraft was probably the 1930’s, though of course TinTin kept it going for some time after that.
For instance, here’s a fictional craft from the Bill Barnes stories called the Scarlet Stormer:
http://tinyurl.com/m6adbw6
There were dozens of unique aircrate in the stories, including some for the bad guys. More on Bill Barnes here:
http://web.archive.org/web/20090908122750/http://home.att.net/~dannysoar4/BillBarnes.htm
Smilin Jack had a bunch, too, like this one:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/71/Jack00.jpg
I’m not an expert on this stuff, but I’m sure some of those older ones rate. Then there’s those fictional aircraft that may show up in proposals to the DOD.
[…] Wanting Something a little more exotic- try the top ten fictional aircraft. Feeling more negative? Enjoy a little glass of  Schadenfreude and read about the Ten Worst […]
[…] Japanese , Belgian, German and Latin American aeroplanes. Want something more bizarre? The Top Ten fictional aircraft is a fascinating read as is the Top Ten cancelled fighters. Read an interview with a Super Hornet […]
[…] Something a little more exotic- try the top ten fictional aircraft. Feeling more negative? Enjoy a little glass of  Schadenfreude and read about the Ten Worst […]
The “Whispercraft” from the movie “Six Days” should have made the list.
As for the better, pun name for dressed up aircraft, I suggest “air drag queen”…
[…] American aeroplanes. Want something more bizarre? The Top Ten fictional aircraft is a fascinating read as is the Top Ten cancelled […]
[…] American aeroplanes. Want something more bizarre? The Top Ten fictional aircraft is a fascinating read as is the Top Ten cancelled […]
[…] Hush-Kit Top Ten: The Ten best Fictional Aircraft | Hush … – October 28, 2013 – 8:52 am LR. There are some great planes on here, but it sounds like “The Ten Best Ficional Aircraft Since 1980, Plus a Token Plane from Later Tin …… […]
Wheres the SR-77 of the X-Men?
[…] Hush-Kit Top Ten : The Ten best Fictional Aircraft | Hush-Kit – October 28, 2013 – 8:52 am LR. There are some great planes on here, but it sounds like “The Ten Best Ficional Aircraft Since 1980, Plus a Token Plane from Later Tin …… […]
What about ASF-X “Shinden II” from Ace Combat series (found in Ace Combat: Assault Horizon and Ace Combat Infinity)?
http://ah.acecombat.jp/wallpaper/nagase/ACAH-N_WP03_1920x1080.jpg
It seems to have both side-intakes and a dorsal-intake. The only point in using a dorsal intake is to reduce RCS from ground based radars – kinda pointless if you have side intakes too. Even more pointless if you have canards (fairly unstealthy) & underwing weapons (completely unstealthy).
The forward swept wings can help with extreme manoeuvrability – but not when you have a dorsal intake which is starved of air during high AOA turns.
Looks cool though 🙂
[…] The Tu-134BSh variant was fitted with a long pointed nose containing the same radar as the Tu-22M bomber. This elongated nose -not found in a breakfast like Gogal’s, to over-bake a Russian cultural reference-was fitted to train crewmen for the complex bomber, but more importantly it looked fantastic, and not entirely unlike Herge’s Carreidas 160. […]
The Star Wars X-Wing is the coolest fictional fighter…
Love the Scorpion, FA37, Mig 37 & Firefox best. awesome,
[…] top tens, including: The 10 Best fighters of 1985, 10 Worst carrier aircraft of all time and the ten best fictional aircraft. I repeat, do not click or you’ll lose ten minutes when you should be […]
[…] fighter aircraft in within-visual and beyond-visual range combat. The greatest fictional aircraft here. An interview with stealth guru Bill Sweetman here. The fashion of aircraft camo here. Interview […]
[…] fighter aircraft in within-visual and beyond-visual range combat. The greatest fictional aircraft here. An interview with stealth guru Bill Sweetman here. The fashion of aircraft camo here. Interview […]
[…] fighter aircraft in within-visual and beyond-visual range combat. The greatest fictional aircraft here. An interview with stealth guru Bill Sweetman here. The fashion of aircraft camo here. Interview […]
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[…] fighter aircraft in within-visual and beyond-visual range combat. The greatest fictional aircraft here. An interview with stealth guru Bill Sweetman here. The fashion of aircraft camo here. Interview […]
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[…] aircraft in within-visual and beyond-visual range combat. The greatest fictional aircraft here. An interview with stealth guru Bill Sweetman here. The fashion of aircraft camo here. […]
[…] is for Fashion (versus aircraft camouflage) and Fictional (top ten fictional […]
No love for the Blackbird, Quinjet or even the Batplane?
Can’t get everything in a list of ten I’m afraid. What’s the Blackbird?
“The Blackbird” is the fictional aircraft of the X-Men. It is, as I recall, based on the SR-79. The X-Men also featured a small flying ?mascot? named “Lockheed.”
add to this the dropship/gunship from Aliens…. UD-4L Cheyenne
What, no Rutland Reindeer?
Or the supporting actor in ‘No Highway’, the Assegai? Although the name and the tendency to break up in flight imply that is was just a lawyer-averse synonym for ‘Swift’.
The aircraft in No Highway was the Prometheus (Supermarine 535). How about the Rutland Reindeer.
What about the Macross Veritech fighter?
What about the Macross Veritech fighter?
http://cdn-static.denofgeek.com/sites/denofgeek/files/styles/insert_main_wide_image/public/6/59//veritech-1.jpg?itok=Rwaygc12
[…] The Top 10 fictional aircraft here […]
[…] thing it did influence was the fictional F/A-37 from the 2005 borefest […]
One that leaps to mind (not immediately, however) is _Tom Swift’s_ giant atomic-powered VTOL jumbo-jet predecessor “Sky Queen”. He designed & flew many aircraft but this is the one which really mattered. Besides, if you have an atomic-powered 4-jet STOL-VTOL strategic transport which can fly for weeks or months on end, do you really need any other aircraft?
It’s a personal mansion-laboratory in the clouds. Tony Stark only has a talking rocket suit.
I’ve never seen an image of Sky Queen but I assume it was more or less like a C-5A or B747 but with hints of _Avengers_ ~ _Agents_Shield_ C-17++.
Tom Swift, Jr.’s aircraft was named the “Flying Lab”. I’d post an illustration from the books when I figure out how to post photos here.
Adios, Larry.
Hi Larry, yeah, I d’loaded about 4 of the novels but they were just text, no llustrations! So bummed; all I wanted was the shot of the freighter from _Aquatomic Tracker_ being torpedoed at night seen from Tom’s flying submarine.
I thought Sky Queen was named Sky Queen but ncknamed Flying Lab (because she was always faithful & barked at strangers)?
[…] effective modern fighter aircraft in beyond-visual range combat. The greatest fictional aircraft here. An interview with stealth guru Bill Sweetman here. The fashion of aircraft camo here. Interview […]
What?! Where is Thunderbird 1 and Thunderbird 2 ???
Good choices. I’d add the Japanese floatplane nicknamed Ione. It is pictured in 2 of my old aircraft books and resembles Italian twin-engined bombers with 2 floats. It was supposedly armed with forward-firing 37 mm cannons in each wing. Don’t know knew who reported its existence, but it didn’t exist.
Remember Blake and Mortimer!
Without a doubt the “S-21” from “Porco Rosso” is my favorite. I’m sorry it eclipsed the real “S-21” but worse things have happened. My second favorite is the “A-17” from Joe Poyer’s near-future-techno-thriller-sci-fi novel, “North Cape”. (C) 1969, ISBN 0-515-03042-2 An SR-71 follow-on, with two P&W turbo-ram-rocket engines, 1 person crew. Highly automated, days-long loiter time, over 225,000 foot service ceiling, mach 4.5+, stealthy and with active countermeasures as well. Refueled by KB-58s.
“The body was 120 feel long, yet nowhere was it more than eight feet in diameter. The fuselage carried the distinctive contours of a supersonic aircraft: A pinched waist, Coke-bottle shaped, half way along its length. The wing began less than 10 feet from the tip of the nose. Starting at a width of half an inch, it grew to two feet a mid length, where it then flaired out into a severely flattened and cambered parallelogram. Twin vertical stabilizers rode the wing, reaching 4 stories toward the ceiling… each demurely painted with the symbol of the United States, a six-by-nine-foot representation of the American flag. Other than that red, white and blue flag, the aircraft was a gleaming black, a deadly killer whale of an aircraft for all that she was completely unarmed.
The book reflects its era, the1960s, the crew environmental control system dispenses exotic drugs as well as oxygen, heat and pressurization. There are times when the mission requires a human in the loop, but for the long cruises from point to point, it sends the pilot off to sleep, wakes them when necessary. A resource to conserve.
I built a not-well-thought-out model of the A-17, in high school, stretching a 1/72 SR-71 with a second fuselage and wing center-section, where I mounted 1/48 F-111 wings. I replaced the SR-71’s vertical fins with the left and right wings from an RA-5C Vigilante. Not a bad start, but the swing wings were ahead of the engine intakes. Using the Boeing 2707-200 configuration with podded engines under the fixed, horizontal stabilizer would have had a better chance of working… I never could figure out what “…a severely flattened and cambered parallelogram.” was trying to tell me.
Poyer’s description doesn’t correspond to the SR-71 or any other descendent of Project Oxcart. Aft of the cockpit, the SR-71 chine/fuselage is constant cross-section, not tapered, and there is no “Coke bottle” waist. The Whitcomb “area rule” is served by the ogive-ish curve of the chine, then the cockpit tapering up and down at 90 degrees to the wing, then the aft wing and engines at. The fuselage tube is straight, like a B-29 or 707, not curved like a Constellation or the profile of a 747.
Favourite aircraft, f117 nighthawk. Turned out to be so different from the f19 shown here. Close second yf23.
I am hoping against hope that NATO shows a sense of humor (?!?!) and codenames the SU-57 FIREFOX.
I can’t believe you did not think to mention the Blohm und Voss BV.38 Flying Wing from Raiders of the Lost Ark!
http://wp.scn.ru/en/ww15/s/2192/2/0/1
And what about the Firefly the supersonic VTOL rocket plane invested by Simon Black and flown in most of his (fictional) adventures as written by the Australian author (and wartime Sunderland pilot) Ivan Southall? In “Simon Black in Peril” Simon and his pal Alan fly a militarised version with 4 x 20mm cannon to investigate a secret Nazi base in the Pacific. You don’t get to see what the Firefly can do in combat ‘cos it gets bounced by an Arado Ar.196 and shot down right at the start of the story!
http://www.collectingbooksandmagazines.com/blackant.jpg (that’s the Firefly in the background…in the Antarctic…obviously)
And what about the Firefly the supersonic VTOL rocket plane invented by Simon Black and flown in most of his (fictional) adventures as written by the Australian author (and wartime Sunderland pilot) Ivan Southall? In “Simon Black in Peril” Simon and his pal Alan fly a militarised version with 4 x 20mm cannon to investigate a secret Nazi base in the Pacific. You don’t get to see what the Firefly can do in combat ‘cos it gets bounced by an Arado Ar.196 and shot down right at the start of the story!
http://www.collectingbooksandmagazines.com/blackant.jpg (that’s the Firefly in the background…in the Antarctic…obviously)
I can’t believe you did not think to mention the Blohm und Voss BV.38 Flying Wing from Raiders of the Lost Ark!
http://wp.scn.ru/en/ww15/s/2192/2/0/1
or at least one of the planes from the movie “Sky Crawlers”
Good one Billy. W.E.Johns Biggles pre-WW2 stories always had plenty of made-up aircraft – my favorite was the Launcester Lance from “Biggles goes to War” (1938). A single seat fighter “recently become obsolete from the RAF” that Biggles and his chums fly to Maltovia to help them against the aggressions of their bigger neighbor Lovitznia. From the description it sounds like a Gloster Gauntlet. There’s a bit at the start where they get bounced by 5 Lovitznian scouts on route to Maltovia and shoot down 3 of them. Two escape – including the leader with black strut pennons. Biggles saves the day again – hooray!
[…] MiG-242s were radically altered Angel Interceptor props from the Andersen Captain Scarlet […]
[…] MiG-242s had been radically altered Angel Interceptor props from the Andersen Captain Scarlet […]
Why not the oscar ew-5894 Phallus from Hot Shots? I thought that one was quirky enough
Great reading thiss
I’m not sure the Angel Interceptors were VTOL? They were catapulted off Cloudbase…
I’m honestly surprised none of the countless fictional aircraft from the Ace Combat series of video games ever made the cut; aircraft such as the X-02 Wyvern or the XFA-24 Apalis.
I’m not a gamer, so I’m unaware of these.