Flight_endurance_record

Flight endurance record

Flight endurance record

Length of time an aircraft of a particular category spent in flight without landing


The flight endurance record is the longest amount of time an aircraft of a particular category spent in flight without landing. It can be a solo event, or multiple people can take turns piloting the aircraft, as long as all pilots remain in the aircraft. The limit initially was the amount of fuel that could be stored for the flight, but aerial refueling extended that parameter. Due to safety concerns, the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) no longer recognizes new records for the duration of crewed airplane or glider flights and has never recognized any duration records for helicopters.

The current record for the longest non-stop, non-refueled airplane flight in history (9 days and 3 minutes) was achieved in the Rutan Voyager

Airplane

Non-refueled, crewed

More information Date, Location ...

Refueled, crewed

The Cessna 172, used by Robert Timm and John Cook, hanging in Harry Reid International Airport.
Robert Timm and John Cook Cessna 172 refueling
The aircraft Curtiss Robin "St. Louis" during the record flight July 13–30, 1929, St. Louis, Missouri.
More information Date, Location ...

Airline, scheduled

Not an FAI category. See Longest Flights

More information Date, Location ...

Airplane, uncrewed

FAI does not differentiate between non-refueled and solar aircraft. Class U : Experimental

More information Date, Location ...

Helicopter

Crewed, non-refueled

More information Date, Location ...

Uncrewed

More information Date, Location ...

Free balloon, crewed

More information Date, Location ...

Airship

More information Date, Location ...

Glider

More information Date, Location ...

Space station, crewed

Duration that a specific person continuously occupies the spacecraft while in orbit.

See Also Timeline of longest spaceflights, List of spaceflight records

More information Date, Location ...

Aerospacecraft, orbital, crewed

More information Date, Location ...

See also

Notes

  1. Note The "Double Sunrise" route continued to be operated from July 18, 1945 until April 6, 1946 by Qantas Liberators (loaned from BOAC) and Qantas Avro Lancastrians, but with shorter flown distances (departing what is now PER, stopping for refuelling at the RAF base at Minneriya, and landing at what is now CMB) and shorter flight times (faster cruise speeds).[51]

References

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