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What airplane designs have been around the longest, from first flight through last retirement from active commercial or military service?

My guess is that the DC-3 will win, since it has been around since before WW II and is still in service, although there are enough other designs out there I'm not familiar with that I'll be interested to see where I may be wrong on that. (Russian designs come to mind as an obvious source of possibilities.)

Can anything out there beat the DC-3? What's the runner up?

(The wikipedia page on the DC-3 says its first flight was December 17, 1935.)

Steve V.
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Ralph J
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    @Farhan - similar, but distinct in that I'm thinking less about production timeframes, than design logevity. That site has some interesting leads, though. (Looks like he deleted his comment; site posted was https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most-produced_aircraft) – Ralph J May 18 '15 at 19:01
  • Yes, I deleted my comment as I noticed answers started to come in. So I thought I might not have completely understood the question. – Farhan May 18 '15 at 19:59
  • There is already an older plane listed, but the PBY Catalina first flew in March 1935 and there are still models being flown. – CGCampbell May 18 '15 at 21:51
  • If you are asking for airplane you already have answers, if you are looking for aircraft, ballon basic design is unchanged since centuries. That will be your oldest designed aircraft. Airplanes are a little bit more than one century old – Trebia Project. May 18 '15 at 22:38
  • I'm not sure to fully understand the question. Do replicas count? Are you looking for the oldest aircraft still maintained in flying condition? – Manu H May 19 '15 at 12:36
  • The answers below are good, but a good bet for the longest combat aircraft might be the B-52. It first flew in 1955 and is scheduled to last into the 2040s, though with the difficulty of retiring aircraft lately it may very well make it to its hundredth birthday in service (some aging MIG fighters from the early 50s are also in service with third-world air forces, but they are unlikely to last another 25+ years) – SSumner May 19 '15 at 21:56
  • @SSumner - if this question comes up in 2050, I wouldn't bet against the B-52 (although something like the C-130 or B-747 or 737 be viable by then as well), but given the strong preference at SE for answers rather than speculations & discussions, I think limiting the question to what has that longevity today, rather than what may hold the title in the future, may be best. – Ralph J May 20 '15 at 23:12
  • @RalphJ - sure, and that's why I made it a comment rather than an answer (though the 737 and 747 are a full 10 years younger than the B-52, and the C-130 some 3 years younger - I mistyped the BUFF's first flight) – SSumner May 20 '15 at 23:29
  • @SSumner - All true, but those 3 are all still in production 50+ years later, with two of the production lines still going strong. So even if the BUFF makes it to 100, it may be one of the others that takes the last crew back home from the Boneyard. We'll check back in another 40 years or so and see how things have turned out! – Ralph J May 21 '15 at 01:48

6 Answers6

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This is a community-wiki mashup of the other answers - I thought a table would be useful.

Date Introduced Aircraft Type Commercial Service (2015)
1909 Bleriot XI Flown by Shuttleworth collection UK, entrance fee.
1932 JU-52 Sight seeing flights by Ju-Air, Switzerland.
1932 Tiger Moth Flight experiences, e.g. Cheltenham UK.
1934 Dragon Rapide Sight seeing flights, London.
1935 DC-3 Many still in airline passenger or cargo service (Nothern Canada, Alaska, Venezuela); some re-engined to turboprop engines.
1935 PBY Catalina Still used in aerial firefighting role.
1938 Piper Cub Many still in private/GA use and in flight schools.
1945 Beech Bonanza Date is from first flight, model is still produced and a common private/GA airplane
1947 AN-2 Still in widespread use in 2020.
1952 B-52 76 still in service with USAF. Projected service to 2045?
1952 Tu-95 In service with Russian air force. Projected service to 2040?
Raketenolli
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RedGrittyBrick
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    Seems reasonable to point out that all those older than the DC-3 are one, two, three flying examples -- and there are still dozens, if not hundreds of DC-3 in day-to-day service around the world. – Zeiss Ikon Dec 16 '20 at 16:40
  • @ZeissIkon According to Wikipedia there are about 250 Tiger Moths still flying. – Eric S Dec 18 '20 at 02:13
  • @EricS Okay. As trainers? I know of a few doing effectively barnstorming. – Zeiss Ikon Dec 18 '20 at 12:05
  • @EricS, the important part about DC-3 is that it is still in airline service, not as flight experience because it is old, but because it is so well suited to operating to remote poorly maintained unpaved airstrips. – Jan Hudec Apr 23 '22 at 13:37
  • @JanHudec According to Wikipedia the Tiger Moth is still occasionally used as a primary trainer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Tiger_Moth?wprov=sfti1 – Eric S Apr 23 '22 at 17:22
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If any commercial or military service will do then there are a few designs which are older.

There's a de Havilland Dragon Rapide still in commercial service doing air tours around London, that's first flight was in 1934. The Noorduyn Norseman is still used for air tours and cargo work and it was first flown a month before the DC3. The Ford Trimotor was introduced in 1925 and I think there's still one or two doing tours.

Apart from tours the DC3 is still the one I'd think of as still doing really serious service.

fooot
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GdD
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  • There are at least two Ford Trimotor still offering tours. http://www.eaa.org/en/eaa/flight-experiences/fly-the-ford-eaa-ford-tri-motor-airplane-tour – user694844 May 19 '15 at 15:15
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The Shuttleworth Collection, at Old Warden aerodrome in Great Britain, has a flyable Bleriot XI which was built in 1909 and served at a flight school into the Thirties. It is still regularly displayed in flight. You might argue that this is no commercial service, but to witness the display, you need to buy a ticket, and ticket sales help to support the collection. So I enter it as a contender here.

Having flown first in 1932, the Ju-52 is also older than the DC-3 or even the Dragon Rapide. Several are still in commercial service - you can book scheduled sight-seeing flights with the Swiss operator Ju-Air. Ju-Air's three Ju-52 served from 1939 to 1982 in the Swiss Air Force. Wikipedia has an exhaustive list of current Ju-52 operators.

Peter Kämpf
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    The CASA license-built Spanish version of the Ju52 was in service with the Spanish air force until 1974 or 75. It was a safe and conveniently slow plane for parachute drop training train. I myself flew many times in it during my military service... – xxavier Mar 20 '17 at 17:38
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The legendary Piper Cub which was used as a trainer during WWII and first flew in 1938 is still a popular plane and although not by Piper is still made in some form of variants today. I dont think its in service any more (at least as far as I know) but there are still loads of them flying.

Dave
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The USAF B-52 first flew in 1952, stopped production in 1962, is still a frontline bomber, and is projected to continue service until 2045

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_B-52_Stratofortress

ian
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Ju-52 started in 1931 and in 2018 - after 87 years - was still used for a commercial passenger transportation (nostalgic flights but between the two different airports like Duebendorf to Locarno all the way over the Alps and not just circular tours), by the Duebendorf based airline (Switzerland).

Unfortunately these flights were suspended after the 79 year old aircraft crashed in 2018. However the airline expects to resume the service in 2021 (source).

Older designs may serve for longer as they parts have less (or no any) strict life limits as set by the manufacturer.

h22
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