From the Plane That Broke the Sound Barrier to Reusable Spacecraft, These Are the Most Badass X-Planes Ever Made

X-planes have been the proving ground for innovative flight tech for decades, but these nine shine above the rest.

bell x 1a

X-planes have long been the proving ground for innovative flight tech. From the first plane to break the sound barrier to high altitude, long endurance (HALE) tests, the 72 planes spanning nearly 77 years have captured the imaginations of aviation enthusiasts the world over. Each was purpose-built and pushed the limits of aviation, but these nine X-planes are the most badass of the bunch.

X-1 (1946)

1940s 1950s bell x 1 usH. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock//Getty Images

Shortly after the end of World War II, Bell Aircraft, along with the U.S. Air Force and the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (the predecessor to NASA), set out to break the sound barrier. This is the plane that did it: the Bell X-1. Testing of the rocket-engine plane began in 1946. On October 14, 1947, on the plane’s 50th flight, Chuck Yeager reached Mach 1.

The famous flight cemented Yeager’s reputation as a daring test pilot, which landed him a role as a commandant at the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School, training future astronauts in the nascent space program. And future iterations of the X-1 cement the plane’s aviation legacy: The X-1E variant reached the program’s record speed in 1958, hitting Mach 3 at 1,021 miles per hour.

X-11 and X-12 (1957 and 1958)

atlas missile going into sky

The X-11 and X-12 weren’t planes, but rather the first tests of the SM-65 Atlas Rockets. Conceived as intercontinental ballistic missiles, the Atlas family of rockets instead has played a major role in the space program, launching the last four Mercury missions— including Friendship 7, the craft which took John Glenn on the first manned orbit of the Earth. It also launched the Surveyor and Mariner probes, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and the New Horizons spacecraft.

X-15 (1958)

bill dana with x 15Smith Collection/Gado//Getty Images

This space plane was one of the first reusable spacecraft, reaching suborbital altitudes of 62 miles by 1963. So, while he didn’t beat Yuri Gagarin or Alan Shepherd to space, test pilot Joe Walker flew high enough to qualify as an astronaut. (NASA didn’t officially recognize the feat until 2005, when the agency gave a number of X-15 pilots their astronaut wings.) Air Force pilot Pete Knight took the plane on the fastest recorded ride at 4,520 miles-per-hour in 1967, a record it still holds.

NASA research pilot Bill Dana is pictured here in front of the X-15 aircraft on October 24, 1967.

X-25 (1955)

the bensen b8 gyrocopter
Mark Kauffman//Getty Images

Also known as the Bensen B-8, the lightweight single-seat helicopter was designed for use by downed pilots in emergency evacuations. The program started in the 50s, but had only two flights under the X designation, both in 1968.

The importance of this funny-looking helicopter isn’t in the X-flights, but rather in what the gyro became: a hobbyist’s favorite home aircraft. In fact, Igor Bensen, the inventor of the B-8, didn’t have the military in mind when he set out to build the craft. Like everything in the Bensen fleet, it was a cheap, easy way to get young people excited about aviation and provided aviation enthusiasts with a cheap way to take to the air.

X-29 (1984)

grumman x 29a forward swept wing fighterMuseum of Flight Foundation//Getty Images

Look at the X-29 and you’ll immediately notice what made this Grumman-built craft so unusual: those forward-swept wings. The design was meant to reduce drag, though the whole thing was so unstable that the plane required a fly-by-wire computer system to keep the thing in the air. The X-29 was one of the last forward-swept wing planes tested by the U.S. military. The Russian military tested the SU-47, its own version of this strange-looking aircraft.

X-37 (2006)

in a testing procedure, the x 37b orbital test vehicle taxis on the flightline march 30, 2010, at the astrotech facility in titusville, fla courtesy photo
U.S. Air Force

The X-37 is a favorite of conspiracy theorists, who believe it to be a surveillance tool or a weapons platform. Not surprising, considering the Pentagon won’t tell us what it’s up to in space.

X-37 was shuttled from NASA’s purview to the Department of Defense, then launched into orbit in 2010. The X-37B recently returned from its sixth mission on November 12, 2022, after having spent 908 in orbit. The next aircraft in the series, the X-37-C, will have the capacity for six astronauts.

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X-47 (2011)

an x 47b unmanned combat air system makes an arrested landingStocktrek Images//Getty Images

Drones are just for surveillance anymore. The X-47, a fighter jet-sized unmanned aircraft (that looks a little like a UFO), has performed takeoffs and landings on aircraft carriers, alongside more traditional fighters. The plane is seen as a predecessor to an upcoming fleet of aircraft known as the Unmanned Carrier-Launched Surveillance and Strike crafts, which will conduct intricate missions in dangerous areas.

X-57 Maxwell (2016)

x57 maxwell
NASA

The X-57 Maxwell is NASA’s first all-electric plane, which is modified from an Italian Tecnam P2006T—the lightest certified four-seat, twin-engine plane on the market. According to NASA, its goal with creating the X-57 “is to share the aircraft’s electric-propulsion-focused design and airworthiness process with regulators, which will advance certification approaches for distributed electric propulsion in emerging electric aircraft markets.” Its first test flight is slated for sometime in 2023.

X-59 QueSST (2018)

nasa x 59

The X-59 QueSST—short for Quiet SuperSonic Technology—is NASA’s solution to quieter supersonic air travel. In development by Skunk Works and built by Lockheed Martin, the X-59 is designed to travel at a speed of Mach 1.42 without producing the typical loud (and sometimes damaging) sonic boom. Instead, the plane should only produce a softer sounding “thump” for those on the ground at a Perceived Level decibel of 75.

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