Spruce Goose
The Hughes Flying Boat represents one of mans greatest attempts to conquer
the skies as the largest airplane ever constructed. It flew only one time on
November 2, 1947. Conceived as a personnel and materiel carrier, the single
hull prototype was designed to fly Trans-Atlantic to avoid World War II German
submarines that were sinking Allied ships in large numbers. Completed in 1947
after the end of the War, the wooden winged giant is nearly six times bigger
than any aircraft of its time. The press insisted on calling the Hughes Flying
Boat the Spruce Goose, a name that its billionaire builder Howard
Hughes despised. Most of the huge plane is actually made of birch, with only
small amounts of maple, poplar, balsa, and, yes, spruce. Birch was chosen because
testing proved it light, strong, and resistant to splitting, dry rot and deterioration.
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information on the Spruce Goose.
Specifications:
Aircraft Type: Cargo Prototype
First Flight: November 1947
Wingspan: 319 feet 11 inches
Length: 218 feet 8 inches
Height: 79 feet 4 inches
Weight: 300,000 pounds
Capacity: 18 Crew, 750 troops