Plane Facts: Tails

Learn about the history and development of airplane tails.

Antonov AN-225 Tail
The huge and unusual tail section of the world's biggest plane, the Antonov AN-225.
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The empennage, or aircraft tail, is crucial for stabilization and control, with conventional designs being the most prevalent (approximately 75%) among various configurations like V-tails, T-tails, and twin-tails.
  • Aircraft tail designs vary significantly, from the multi-stabilizer attempts on early Douglas DC-4 models to the 79-foot tall tail of the Airbus A380, and specialized twin tails for redundancy in fighter jets.
  • The V-tail design, also known as the "Butterfly Tail," aimed to reduce weight but became controversial due to its association with significantly higher fatality rates in models like the Beechcraft Bonanza Model 35, leading to its eventual replacement with a conventional tail on that aircraft.
  • Some aircraft are designed to be tailless, utilizing configurations like the delta wing to reduce weight and drag, a characteristic often found in modern stealth military aircraft such as the Northrop Grumman RQ-180.
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Antonov AN-225 Tail
The huge and unusual tail section of the world’s biggest plane, the Antonov AN-225.

Proper term: Empennage

Primary function: Stabilization, control

Most common design: Conventional

% of aircraft with conventional tails: ~75%

Other common tail designs: V-Tail, T-Tail, Cruciform, Dual-Tail, Inverted Y

Popular in fighter jets: Twin Tail, aka Double Vertical Stabilizer

Advantage: Redundancy in case of battle damage

Stabilizers on first Douglas DC-4 model: 5 (three above, two below)

Purpose of multiple stabilizers: Fit aircraft into DC-3 Hangar

First flight: 1939

Last flight: 1939

Renamed: DC-4E, for “Extinct”

Main problem cited: Stability due to tail design

Stabilizers on second DC-4 Model: 1

World’s largest aircraft by wingspan: Stratolaunch

Tails: 2

Tail height: 50 ft.

Tail height of Sky Baby, world’s smallest airplane (1952): 5 ft.

Tallest tail in service: 79 ft.

Aircraft: Airbus A380-800

Tail width: 99.6 ft.

Surface area of vertical stabilizer: 2,421.9 sq. ft.

Horizontal stabilizer (each side): 2,314.8 sq. ft.

Average size of U.S. house: 2,392 sq. ft.

Tails on U.S. space shuttles: 0

First tail-less aircraft produced: 1906

Advantage: Reduced weight and drag

Most successful tailless configuration: Delta Wing (triangular)

Popular in: Stealth military aircraft

Modern military tailless model: Northrop Grumman RQ-180 (USAF)

Surface ceiling: 60,700 ft.

Max speed: 590 mph

Crew required: 0

Most controversial tail design: V-Tail

Popularly known as: “Butterfly Tail”

Invented: 1930, by Jerzy Rudlicki

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Dead weight reduction of tail structure: 35%

First aircraft equipped: Hanriot H-28

Modern V-tail civilian aircraft: Cirrus Vision Jet

Most popular V-tailed mass-produced: Beechcraft Bonanza Model 35

Years: 1947-1982

Aircraft nickname: “Forked-Tail Doctor Killer”

Fatality rate (1952): 4.9/100,000 hours

Fatality rate of later models A35, B35 & C35: 2.5/100,000 hours

Average general aviation fatality rate: 1.05/100,000 hours

Bonanza’s tail design since 1982: Conventional

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