Flying coffin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Flying coffin is a pejorative term for an aircraft perceived by crews or the public to have a poor safety record or low combat effectiveness.

Commercial aircraft[edit]

Military aircraft[edit]

First World War and earlier[edit]

  • Airco DH.4, a British two-seat biplane day bomber also called a "flaming coffin" with original fuel tank configuration
  • Airco DH.6, a British military trainer biplane used by the Royal Flying Corps
  • Georges Levy G.L.40, a three-seated French, amphibious biplane
  • Hansa-Brandenburg D.I, also known as the KD (Kampf Doppeldecker) was a German fighter aircraft
  • Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2, a British single-engine tractor two-seat biplane also called "Fokker fodder"

Interwar period[edit]

  • Brewster F2A Buffalo, an American fighter aircraft which saw service early in World War II
  • Potez 540, a French multi-role aircraft which saw service in the Spanish Civil War

Second World War[edit]

1945–present[edit]

See also[edit]