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Monoplane

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A small passenger plane preparing to land at Bristol International Airport.

A monoplane is a type of fixed-wing aircraft that has just one main set of wings. This is different from a biplane or other multiplanes, which have two or more sets of wings.

Monoplanes are usually the most efficient and have the least resistance when flying. They are also the simplest kind of winged airplane to build.

In the early days of flying, monoplanes were not used very often. They were heavier and could not turn as easily as other planes. But after the 1930s, monoplanes became the most common kind of airplane. Today, almost all airplanes you see in the sky are monoplanes because they work so well. You can find them in many shapes, like the low wing of a Supermarine Spitfire, the mid wing of a de Havilland Vampire T11, the high wing of a de Havilland Canada Dash 8, or the parasol wing on R.J. Mitchell's 1930 Supermarine Air Yacht.

Characteristics

The monoplane is efficient because it has just one wing. The best kind of monoplane wing is called a "cantilever." This means the wing carries all its weight inside itself. To fly well, the wing needs to be thin, which can make it harder to build.

Early monoplanes often had extra supports outside the wing. These supports made the planes lighter and cheaper, and let them fly slower with smaller engines. But they also made the plane slower because they created drag. Today, fast planes usually don’t have these supports, while slower planes might still use them.

Wing position

Besides different ways to arrange the wings, the main difference in monoplanes is where the wing is placed up and down on the body of the plane, called the fuselage.

Low

Low wing on a Curtiss P-40

A low wing is placed on or near the bottom of the fuselage.
This helps the pilot see upward better and keeps the middle part of the fuselage open. It can make the plane easier to turn, like on the Spitfire.

Mid

Mid wing on a Boeing 777-300ER

A mid wing is placed in the middle of the fuselage. This is the most common shape for big planes, especially those that carry passengers.

Shoulder

A shoulder wing sits near the top of the fuselage but not all the way up. This helps the plane stay steady and gives more space for the wheels of the plane. On smaller planes, this shape lets the pilot see better. Examples include the ARV Super2, the Bölkow Junior, Saab Safari and the Barber Snark.

High

Parasol wing on a Pietenpol Air Camper

A high wing sits on or above the top of the fuselage. On small planes such as the Cessna 152, the wing is usually above the seats, which helps load things easier. Many military planes that carry cargo have this shape.

Parasol

A parasol wing is not stuck directly to the fuselage but held above it, using special supports. This was useful for old fighting planes like the Fokker D.VIII and for water planes that needed to keep their propellers away from spray, like the Martin M-130, Dornier Do 18 and the Consolidated PBY Catalina. This shape is still used for small planes people build themselves.

History

The Santos-Dumont Demoiselle was the first production monoplane (replica shown).

The first attempts to build airplanes were monoplanes, but the first successful airplanes were biplanes. Early examples include the 1907 Santos-Dumont Demoiselle, the first airplane made for production, and the Blériot XI, which flew across the English Channel in 1909. In 1909–1910, Hubert Latham set height records in his Antoinette IV monoplane.

The Short Brothers' first attempt at a monoplane, 1911

In Germany, monoplanes were called Eindecker. A famous example was the mid-wing Fokker Eindecker fighter from 1915. However, World War I was mostly fought with biplanes. By the end of the war, the parasol monoplane became popular.

Few monoplanes were built between 1914 and the late 1920s because early engines were not strong enough. As engines became stronger, all-metal construction and the cantilever wing made monoplanes more practical. By the 1930s, the cantilever monoplane became the standard design for airplanes. Advanced monoplane fighter planes were made in the Soviet Union and the United States during the early to mid 1930s, such as the Polikarpov I-16 and the Boeing P-26 Peashooter.

Most military aircraft in WWII were monoplanes, and nearly all airplanes since then have been monoplanes. With the power of jet and rocket engines, all modern high-speed airplanes are monoplanes.

Images

An early metal aircraft from 1915 being prepared for its first flight
A pilot in a Spitfire aircraft at the Flying Legends air show in 2005.
A vintage De Havilland Vampire jet aircraft on display at the 2008 Royal International Air Tattoo.
An old airplane called the Supermarine Air-Yacht, used for flying and travel in the past.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Monoplane, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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