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  2. List of pusher aircraft by configuration and date - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pusher_aircraft_by...

    A pusher aircraft is a type of aircraft using propellers placed behind the engines. Pushers may be classified according to lifting surfaces layout (conventional or 3 surface, canard, joined wing, tailless and rotorcraft) as well as engine/propeller location and drive. For historical interest, pusher aircraft are also classified by date.

  3. List of pusher aircraft by configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pusher_aircraft_by...

    A pusher aircraft is a type of aircraft using propellers placed behind the engines and may be classified according to engine/propeller location and drive as well as the lifting surfaces layout (conventional or 3 surface, canard, joined wing, tailless and rotorcraft), Some aircraft have a Push-pull configuration with both tractor and pusher engines.

  4. Piaggio P.180 Avanti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piaggio_P.180_Avanti

    The fractional aircraft operator Avantair was Piaggio's largest client, with a fleet of 57 Avanti aircraft, [28] before they went bankrupt and the fleet was liquidated. [77] [78] In May 2017, 220 aircraft were in operation around the world, [79] with 89 being first-generation Avanti, 126 second-generation Avanti II and 6 Avanti EVO models. [80]

  5. Lockheed Constellation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_Constellation

    The Lockheed Constellation ("Connie") is a propeller-driven, four-engined airliner built by Lockheed Corporation starting in 1943. The Constellation series was the first civil airliner family to enter widespread use equipped with a pressurized cabin, enabling it to fly well above most bad weather, thus significantly improving the general safety and ease of commercial passenger air travel.

  6. Push-pull configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Push-pull_configuration

    Twin boomers such as the Cessna Skymaster and Adam A500 have the aircraft's tail suspended via twin booms behind the pusher propeller. In contrast, both the World War II-era Dornier Do 335 and the early 1960s-designed French Moynet M 360 Jupiter experimental private plane had their pusher propeller behind the tail. [1] [2]

  7. List of canard aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_canard_aircraft

    This is a list of canard aircraft, ... Propeller: Sports plane: 1980: Production: 62: ... Propeller: Three-seat modification of the Rutan Long-EZ.

  8. Curtiss Model D - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtiss_Model_D

    "Headed" Model D at the College Park Air Museum "Headless" Model D replica at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. A number of Curtiss Pusher original and reproduction aircraft exist, and reproductions of the design date as far back to the era when the original aircraft was in production, mostly built by private parties.

  9. Kyushu J7W Shinden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyushu_J7W_Shinden

    Kyushu J7W1 Shinden fuselage at the National Air and Space Museum Washington, DC. The two prototypes were the only examples of the Shinden ever completed. After the end of the war, one was scrapped; the other was claimed by a U.S. Navy Technical Air Intelligence Unit in late 1945, dismantled, and shipped to the United States.