Lockheed Have Blue

Missing image
Have_blue.jpg
Have blue on ground

Have Blue was the code-name for Lockheed's prototype Stealth Fighter program which preceded the F-117 Nighthawk production stealth aircraft project. The Have Blue was the first airplane designed from an electrical engineering (rather than an aerodynamic) perspective. The aircraft's plate-like, faceted shape was designed to deflect electromagnetic waves, making the plane essentially invisible to radar.

Two Have Blue planes were built to test both the flight dynamics and radar-returns of the stealth concept. These prototypes flew at Groom Lake, Nevada, between 1977 and 1979. The design was aerodynamically unstable. Both planes were lost in crashes, and the debris from these aircraft was buried near the lake bed.

"Even though the test site was in a remote location, our airplane was kept under wraps inside its hangar most of the time. Soviet spy satellites made regular passes, and every time our airplane was rolled out everyone on the base who wasn't cleared for Have Blue had to go into the windowless mess hall and have a cup of coffee until we took off."
Ben Rich, director of Lockheed's Skunk Works from 1975 to 1991.

Specifications (Have Blue)

General Characteristics

Performance

Related content

Related development: F-117 Nighthawk

Comparable aircraft: Tacit Blue

Designation sequence:

See also:


Lists of Aircraft | Aircraft manufacturers | Aircraft engines | Aircraft engine manufacturers

Airports | Airlines | Air forces | Aircraft weapons | Missiles | Timeline of aviation

See also: Lockheed Have Blue, 1977 in aviation, 1979 in aviation, Ben Rich, F-117 Nighthawk, Groom Lake, List of air forces, List of aircraft, List of aircraft engine manufacturers