rank |
name |
span |
nation |
flew |
built |
remarks |
1 |
Hughes H-4 Hercules "Spruce Goose" |
97.54 |
USA |
1947 |
1 |
8-prop flying boat transport |
2 |
Antonov An-225 Mriya |
88.39 |
USSR |
1988-96? |
1 |
6-jet mod. of An-124 for shuttle |
3 |
AeroVironment Helios |
75.30 |
USA |
1999+ |
1 |
14-solar-prop unmanned research |
4 |
Antonov An-124 Ruslan |
73.30 |
USSR/Ukr |
1982+ |
c.60+ |
4-jet heavy cargo transport |
5 |
Consolidated Vultee B-36 Peacemaker |
70.10 |
USA |
1946-59 |
383 |
6-prop & 4-jet strategic bomber |
(tie) |
Consolidated Vultee XC-99 |
70.10 |
USA |
1947-57 |
1 |
6-prop transport mod. of B-36 |
(tie) |
Bristol Type 167 Brabazon I |
70.10 |
UK |
1949-53 |
1 |
8-prop luxury airliner |
8 |
Lockheed C-5 Galaxy |
67.88 |
USA |
1968+ |
131 |
4-jet heavy military transport |
9 |
Mil Mi-12 |
67.00 |
USSR |
1968-69? |
2 or 3 |
4-jet 2-rotor transport helicopter |
10 |
Saunders-Roe S.R. 45 Princess |
66.90 |
UK |
1952-? |
3 |
10-turboprop flying boat airliner |
11 |
Antonov An-22 Antheus |
66.40 |
USSR |
1965+ |
66 |
4-turboprop heavy transport |
12 |
Douglas XB-19 |
64.62 |
USA |
1941-46 |
1 |
4-prop heavy bomber |
13 |
Boeing 747-400 |
64.40 |
USA |
1969+ |
1255+ |
4-jet heavy widebody airliner |
(tie) |
Boeing YAL-1 Attack Laser |
64.40 |
USA |
2000+ |
1+ |
anti-missile laser cannon on 747 |
15 |
Tupolev ANT-20 Maxim Gorki |
63.63 |
USSR |
1934-35 |
1 |
8-prop propaganda mod. of TB-4 |
16 |
Tupolev ANT-20 bis (PS-124?) |
63.00 |
USSR |
1938-40 |
1? |
6-prop improved ANT-20 |
17 |
Consolidated Vultee YB-60 |
62.78 |
USA |
1952-54 |
2 |
8-jet major modification of B-36 |
18 |
AeroVironment Centurion |
62.50 |
USA |
1998+ |
1 |
14-solar-prop unmanned research |
19 |
Junkers Ju 322 Mammut |
62.35 |
Germany |
1941 |
2 |
heavy transport assault glider |
20 |
Martin JRM Mars |
60.96 |
USA |
1942+ |
6 |
4-prop flying boat cargo/waterbomber |
21 |
Boeing 777 |
60.90 |
USA |
1994+ |
321+ |
2-jet heavy widebody airliner |
22 |
Airbus A340 |
60.30 |
Europe |
1991+ |
194+ |
4-jet heavy widebody airliner |
(tie) |
Airbus A330 |
60.30 |
Europe |
1992+ |
178+ |
2-jet modification of A340 |
24 |
Blohm und Voss BV 238 |
60.17 |
Germany |
1944 |
1 |
6-prop flying boat transport |
25 |
Ilyushin Il-96M |
60.10 |
USSR/Rus |
1993+ |
c.16+ |
4-jet heavy widebody airliner |
26 |
Boeing E-4 AWACS |
59.64 |
USA |
1973+ |
4 |
electronic warfare mod. of 747 |
27 |
Boeing VC-25 "Air Force One" |
59.64 |
USA |
1990+ |
2 |
VIP version of 747 |
28 |
Lockheed R6VConstitution |
57.64 |
USA |
1946-55 |
2 |
4-prop double-deck transport |
29 |
Latécoerè Laté 631 |
57.43 |
France |
1942-53? |
8 |
6-prop flying boat airliner |
30 |
Grob Strato 2C |
56.50 |
Germany |
1995-96? |
1? |
2-prop high-altitude research |
31 |
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress |
56.39 |
USA |
1952+ |
763 |
8-jet heavy strategic bomber |
32 |
Tupolev Tu-85 |
56.00 |
USSR |
1951-58 |
2 |
4-prop heavy bomber |
33 |
Tupolev Tu-160 |
55.70 |
USSR |
1981+ |
34 |
4-jet swingwing strategic bomber |
34 |
Messerschmitt Me 321 Gigant |
55.00 |
Germany |
1941-45 |
200 |
heavy transport glider |
(tie) |
Messerschmitt Me 323 Gigant |
55.00 |
Germany |
1941-45 |
198 |
6-prop modification of Me 321 |
36 |
Douglas C-133 Cargomaster |
54.76 |
USA |
1956-71 |
50? |
4-turboprop heavy transport |
37 |
Tupolev TB-4 (ANT-16) |
54.00 |
USSR |
1933-? |
few |
6-prop bomber |
38 |
Myasishchev VM-T Atlant |
53.60 |
USSR |
1981+ |
3? |
bulk cargo carrier version of M-6 |
39 |
Myasishchev M-6 Molot (3M) |
53.14 |
USSR |
1956-94 |
83 |
enlarged M-4 |
40 |
Douglas C-124 Globemaster II |
53.04 |
USA |
1949-73? |
448 |
enlarged C-74 |
41 |
Kalinin K-7 |
53.00 |
USSR |
1933 |
1 |
6-prop flying wing heavy bomber |
42 |
Douglas C-74 Globemaster I |
52.81 |
USA |
1945-56 |
14 |
4-prop heavy transport |
43 |
Northrop B-35 Flying Wing |
52.42 |
USA |
1946-49? |
9? |
4-prop bomber |
(tie) |
Northrop YB-49 Flying Wing |
52.42 |
USA |
1947-50? |
3 |
8-jet (one had 6) mod. of B-35 |
45 |
SNCASE SE 200 (LeO H. 49) |
52.20 |
France |
1942-46? |
2 |
6-prop flying boat transport |
46 |
Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit |
52.12 |
USA |
1989+ |
21 |
4-jet stealth bomber |
47 |
Boeing 767-400ER |
51.90 |
USA |
1999+ |
18+ |
2-jet heavy widebody airliner |
48 |
McDonnell Douglas C-17 Globemaster III |
51.74 |
USA |
1991+ |
64+ |
4-jet military transport |
49 |
McDonnell Douglas MD-11 |
51.70 |
USA |
1990+ |
199 |
modification of DC-10 |
50 |
Tupolev Tu-126 (Tu-24?) AWACS |
51.40 |
USSR |
1968-89? |
8 - 12 |
electronic warfare mod of Tu-114 |
51 |
Tupolev Tu-95 (Tu-20) |
51.10 |
USSR/Rus |
1952+ |
c.430? |
4-turboprop bomber/patrol |
(tie) |
Tupolev Tu-114 |
51.10 |
USSR |
1957-71? |
c.30 |
airliner version of Tu-95 |
(tie) |
Tupolev Tu-116 |
51.10 |
USSR |
1958-61? |
2 |
VIP version of Tu-95 |
(tie) |
Tupolev Tu-142 |
51.10 |
USSR/Rus |
1968+ |
c.30? |
anti-sub/patrol mod. of Tu-95 |
55 |
Tupolev MK-1 (ANT-22) |
51.00 |
USSR |
1934-36 |
1 |
6-prop 2-fuselage flying boat |
56 |
Myasishchev M-4 Molot (2M) |
50.53 |
USSR |
1953-89 |
10 |
4-jet heavy bomber/tanker |
57 |
Ilyushin Il-76 |
50.50 |
USSR/Uzb |
1971+ |
c.900 |
4-jet heavy transport |
(tie) |
Beriev A-50 Shmel AWACS |
50.50 |
USSR/Rus |
1978+ |
c40+? |
electronic warfare mod. of Il-76 |
(tie) |
Ilyushin Il-78 |
50.50 |
USSR/Uzb |
1987+ |
few+? |
tanker/waterbomber mod. of Il-76 |
(tie) |
Baghdad-1 |
50.50 |
Iraq |
? |
1? |
electronic warfare mod. of Il-76 |
(tie) |
Adnan |
50.50 |
Iraq |
? |
3 |
upgraded Baghdad-1 |
62 |
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30/40 |
50.40 |
USA |
1972+ |
248 |
3-jet heavy widebody airliner |
(tie) |
McDonnell Douglas KC-10 Extender |
50.40 |
USA |
1980+ |
60 |
military tanker version of DC-10 |
64 |
Junkers Ju 390 |
50.32 |
Germany |
1943-45 |
2 |
6-prop heavy transport/patrol |
65 |
Lockheed L-1011-500 TriStar |
50.09 |
USA |
1978+ |
50 |
3-jet heavy widebody airliner |
Notes: This list includes all airplanes with a wingspan of 50 meters or more that actually flew. This list does not include lighter-than-air craft or spacecraft, although it does include one helicopter.
Span is the distance in meters from wingtip to wingtip, or in the case of the Mi-12 helicopter, from the left edge of the left rotor disk to the right edge of the right rotor disk. There is a great deal of inconsistency in the reported wingspan for many airplanes, especially older planes and Soviet aircraft. For example, the correct wingspans for the Tu-95, Tu-114, Tu-116, Tu-126, and Tu-142 (which are all basically the same airframe) are a brain-numbing maze of contradictions. However, even well-known modern Western types often have this problem; the wingspan for the DC-10-30/40 is listed as 50.00, 50.25, 50.30, 50.39, 50.40, and 50.41 meters, depending on the source. The figures listed here are just my best guesses based on the information I was able to obtain. Remember that .01 meters is less than half an inch.
Nation is where the plane was built (or modified into a new design such as the Baghdad-1 and Adnan). Ukr is Ukraine, who took over the production of the An-124 when the USSR collapsed; likewise Rus is Russia and Uzb is Uzbekistan.
Flew indicates the years in which the plane was operated. If the dates are followed by a + symbol, that plane is still flying today (yes, two Martin Mars flying boats are still fighting forest fires in British Columbia). There is considerable confusion about the correct dates for many early aircraft, especially Soviet planes; major uncertainties are shown with ?.
Built is the number of planes constructed. These numbers are often very hard to locate, even for well-known airplanes; the ? symbol shows the most uncertain cases. The + symbol indicates the plane is still in production today.
Remarks lists the number of engines; prop indicates a piston-based reciprocating engine; solar-prop is a small solar-powered electric motor driving a propeller.
In some cases, the aircraft listed is a subtype whose wingspan differs from its sister types that are otherwise very similar or nearly identical. I have adjusted the list accordingly. For example, all Boeing 747s have wingspans of more than 50 meters, so the dates flown and number built are for all 747s, even though only the 747-400 has the 64.40-meter span. On the other hand, most Boeing 767s fall below the 50-meter cutoff, so the figures listed are only for the 51.90-meter 767-400ER (of which only 18 have been built as of early 2001).
Written by Michael Trout