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The World’s Worst Aircraft Selection

** The Bristol Brabazon: eight engines, a
230-foot wing and going nowhere.**
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The author critiques a book titled "The World's Worst Aircraft," finding the concept of "worst" subjective and the book's arguments flawed with factual errors and inconsistent judgments.
  • Many aircraft designated as "worst" in the book, such as the Bell P-39 Airacobra and Blohm & Voss BV 141, were actually innovative, performed adequately, or had shortcomings due to external factors rather than inherent design flaws.
  • The article emphasizes that even major "failures" like the Bristol Brabazon embody immense human effort, design innovation, and passion, possessing a "paradoxical grandeur" that should be respected rather than belittled.
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I had a birthday recently, and somebody gave me a book called The World’s Worst Aircraft. There are, it turns out, at least three books with that name, though you would suppose that one, or possibly even none, would have been enough. The project of identifying a distinct group of “worst” aircraft labors under the same curse as those idiotic People magazine nominations of the sexiest man or woman in the world. To start with, sexiness is a completely subjective and indefinable standard; then, you know they didn’t check out all of the men or women in the world; and if they had, it is impossible that there would not be at least a three-way — if not a three-million-way — tie.

So it is with “worst” aircraft. There are no fixed standards; most of the truly hopeless specimens have sunk without a trace; and it is impossible to say why an airplane that made the list is distinctly worse than many that didn’t. The author of the book I received dismisses his project as a mere lark, good just for laughs. He is too kind.

Peter Garrison

Peter Garrison taught himself to use a slide rule and tin snips, built an airplane in his backyard, and flew it to Japan. He began contributing to FLYING in 1968, and he continues to share his columns, ""Technicalities"" and ""Aftermath,"" with FLYING readers.

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