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Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird — History, Specs & Stories

Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird banking over the Sierra Nevada, seen from a tanker aircraft
Military Aircraft Encyclopedia  ›  Reconnaissance  ›  SR-71

Lockheed SR-71
“Blackbird”

The fastest air-breathing manned aircraft ever built. Designed in secret, made of titanium bought from the country it spied on, and never once shot down.

3,529.6 km/hRecord speed · Mach 3.3
25,929 mRecord altitude
32Aircraft built
1964–1999First and last flight
Photo: U.S. Air Force (public domain)
Role Strategic reconnaissanceEra Cold Warמָנוֹעַ 2 × J58 turbo-ramjetOrigin USA · Skunk WorksStatus Retired 1999Want to go supersonic yourself?
הסיפור

Built because a U-2 fell out of the sky

On 1 May 1960, a Soviet SA-2 missile brought down Francis Gary Powers’ U-2 over Sverdlovsk — and with it, America’s assumption that altitude alone could keep a spy plane safe. The answer, already taking shape behind the fences of Lockheed’s Skunk Works under Clarence “Kelly” Johnson, was not to fly a little higher or a little faster. It was to fly so high and so fast that no missile, no interceptor, and no radar operator could do anything but watch.

The design brief was without precedent: sustain Mach 3+ for hours, at the edge of space, over the most heavily defended territory on Earth. At those speeds, airframe surfaces heat past 300 °C — aluminium gives up. So the Blackbird became the first aircraft built almost entirely of titanium, painted in radar-absorbing deep blue-black that also radiated heat away, giving the aircraft its name.

From 1966 to 1998 the SR-71 flew reconnaissance missions over Vietnam, North Korea, the Middle East and along the borders of the Soviet Union. Its standard evasive manoeuvre when a missile launch was detected remains the most quoted line in its story: simply accelerate.

“Everything had to be invented. Everything.”Kelly Johnson — Head of Lockheed Skunk Works, on developing the Blackbird
01The SR-71 Blackbird’s lineage: from the A-12 Oxcart to the fastest jet ever

The Blackbird most people know is actually the third act of the story. It evolved directly from the Lockheed A-12 Oxcart, a single-seat CIA aircraft that was lighter, marginally faster, and so secret its existence wasn’t acknowledged for decades. Between them came the YF-12, an experimental interceptor version armed with missiles — the only Blackbird ever meant to shoot rather than photograph.

The Air Force variant was originally designated RS-71, for “Reconnaissance Strike.” When President Lyndon B. Johnson publicly revealed the programme in July 1964, he announced it as the SR-71 — “Strategic Reconnaissance.” The popular legend says Johnson misread his script and the Air Force quietly renamed the aircraft rather than correct a president; historians lean toward a deliberate change made before the speech. Either way, thousands of blueprints had to be revised.

Everything about the programme ran on that kind of secrecy. Crews were recruited by invitation only, families couldn’t be told what the aircraft did, and the jet’s radar-evading shape and special fuel were decades ahead of the public state of the art — the SR-71 was practising low observability before the word “stealth” existed.


Design & Engineering

What makes it special

01

Titanium — bought from the enemy

Over 85% of the airframe is titanium alloy, the only metal that could take sustained Mach 3 heat. The USSR was the world’s main supplier — so the CIA quietly sourced the ore through third-party shell companies. The Blackbird that spied on the Soviet Union was, in part, made of Soviet titanium.

02

An engine that transforms in flight

The Pratt & Whitney J58 is a hybrid: a turbojet at low speed that progressively behaves like a ramjet as the moving inlet spikes channel air around the core. Above Mach 3, most of the thrust comes from the inlets and afterburner — the faster it flew, the more efficient it got.

03

It leaked fuel by design

Panels were fitted loosely on the ground because the airframe stretches several centimetres and seals itself as friction heats it in flight. A Blackbird dripped JP-7 on the ramp, took off with light tanks, and refuelled from a tanker once airborne — then outran everything.

02The SR-71’s titanium: how the CIA secretly bought it from the Soviet Union

Roughly 85% of the airframe needed titanium — the only metal light enough and heat-tolerant enough for sustained Mach 3. The problem: the United States lacked an adequate domestic supply of the necessary rutile ore, and the world’s dominant source was the Soviet Union itself.

So the CIA built a procurement network of third-country shell corporations and bogus front companies — reportedly including operations posing as manufacturers of pizza ovens — to quietly buy Soviet titanium and route it to Burbank. The aircraft built to spy on the USSR was, in a very real sense, made of the USSR.

Even with the metal in hand, nobody had ever manufactured with titanium at this scale. Early on, Lockheed was scrapping the majority of machined parts: the alloy cracked if it touched chlorine (the plant’s tap water was banned from contact with it) and drill bits that cut steel all day were ruined in moments. The Skunk Works essentially had to invent titanium manufacturing for the entire aerospace industry.

03The SR-71’s J58 engine: how it turns into a ramjet in flight

At takeoff, the J58 works like a conventional afterburning turbojet. As speed builds, the story changes completely — and the key is the pointed inlet spike ahead of each engine, which translates rearward up to 66 cm to position the supersonic shock wave precisely, slowing and compressing incoming air before it ever reaches the compressor.

Above roughly Mach 2, six bypass tubes open and duct air from the fourth compressor stage around the engine core, straight to the afterburner — effectively converting the engine into a ramjet with a turbojet idling at its centre. At Mach 3.2 cruise, the majority of thrust is generated by the inlet and afterburner. The consequence pilots loved: the faster it flew, the more efficient it became — range figures were actually better at Mach 3 than at Mach 2.8.

Diagram of J58 engine airflow patterns at subsonic, transonic and Mach 3+ flight regimes

J58 airflow at different speeds — how the same engine breathes three different ways.

04Why touching the SR-71 Blackbird can cut you

Museum docents warn visitors for good reason — this aircraft is physically hostile to human hands, in at least three ways.

Intentional panel gaps

The airframe was engineered with loose, unsealed titanium panels to absorb massive thermal expansion at Mach 3. Cold on the ground, those panels contract, leaving exposed, razor-sharp edges and gaps across the fuselage.

Knife-edge chines

The long lateral extensions running from the nose along the fuselage — the chines — are remarkably thin and sharp. They generate lift, improve stability, and scatter radar, and they will slice an unwary finger.

Corrugated wing skin

Large sections of the wing use corrugated titanium so the skin can flex instead of warping under heat. Sliding a bare hand quickly across those rigid ridges can cut skin like a serrated edge.

And don’t touch it after landing

Aerodynamic friction heats the skin to around 316 °C and the windshield to 260 °C — crews waited for the airframe to cool before ground handling. Add the film of leaked JP-7 on the skin and the toxic triethylborane (TEB) used to ignite the engines, and the world’s fastest aircraft is also one you approach with respect on the ground.

05The SR-71’s fuel: JP-7 and TEB explained

JP-7 was created specifically for this aircraft: a fuel with a flashpoint so high you could reportedly drop a lit match into a bucket of it and watch the match go out. That safety at 300 °C skin temperatures came with a catch — it’s so reluctant to ignite that a conventional igniter can’t light it at all.

The answer was triethylborane (TEB), a chemical that bursts into flame on contact with air. Each engine carried a small sealed tank with enough TEB for 16 injections — one for every engine start and every afterburner light. Crews counted them like ammunition: run out of TEB shots, and no amount of fuel on board will relight your engine. The fuel also doubled as coolant and hydraulic fluid, circulating heat away from the crew and systems before being burned.

Feeding all this was its own operation: a dedicated fleet of KC-135Q tankers, the only aircraft plumbed for JP-7, choreographed along every mission route.


Technical Data

Full specifications

Airframe & Performance

צוות
2 — Pilot + Reconnaissance Systems Officer
מֶשֶׁך
32.74 m
מוּטַת כְּנָפַים
16.94 m
גוֹבַה
5.64 m
Max takeoff weight
~78,000 kg
Max speed
Mach 3.3 · 3,529.6 km/h
תקרת השירות
25,900 m (85,000 ft)
לָנוּעַ
~5,400 km unrefuelled

Propulsion & Systems

Engines
2 × Pratt & Whitney J58
Thrust (each)
145 kN with afterburner
Fuel
JP-7 (high flashpoint, custom)
הְתחַמְשׁוּת
None — speed was the defence
Sensors
Cameras, side-looking radar, ELINT
First flight
22 December 1964
Built
32 (12 lost, all in accidents)
Unit cost
~$34 million (1960s USD)
Cost per flight hour
~$85,000 (1990s estimate)
06Every Blackbird variant: A-12 Oxcart, YF-12 and SR-71A/B/C — including the “Bastard”

The family tree: the CIA’s single-seat A-12 Oxcart (13 built, lighter and marginally faster), the missile-armed YF-12 interceptor prototype (3 built), the mainline SR-71A (29 built), the twin-cockpit SR-71B trainer with its raised instructor station (2 built), and the one-off SR-71C — assembled from the front half of a static test airframe and the back half of a crashed YF-12, flying slightly crooked its whole life and known to crews as “the Bastard.”

07The SR-71 Blackbird’s operating costs: what Mach 3 actually cost

Each SR-71 cost about $34 million in 1960s dollars — several hundred million per airframe in today’s money. But buying the jet was the cheap part.

Operating it is commonly estimated at around $85,000 per flight hour in then-year dollars, and analyses that include the dedicated KC-135Q tanker fleet, the special JP-7 fuel chain and the pressure-suit crew infrastructure put the true figure at up to $200,000 per hour — among the most expensive aircraft ever operated.

Across 34 years the fleet logged 53,490 total flight hours, of which 11,675 were flown above Mach 3. Set against a development and production programme on the order of a billion 1960s dollars, every single flight hour carried roughly $20,000 of programme cost before a drop of fuel was burned. That arithmetic — more than any missile — is what finally retired the Blackbird: reconnaissance satellites don’t bill by the hour.

The thirst behind those numbers: at cruise the Blackbird burned 36,000–44,000 lbs of JP-7 per hour — about 5,500–6,700 US gallons, or 3–4 gallons every second, roughly 20 lbs of fuel per mile. Its six tanks held up to 80,000 lbs (~12,200 gallons), yet it typically took off with a partial load, met a KC-135Q tanker minutes after takeoff, and refuelled roughly every 90 minutes for the rest of the mission.


Timeline

Thirty-five years at Mach 3

1964

First flight

22 December — the SR-71 flies from Palmdale, California, exceeding Mach 1 on its maiden flight.

1968

First operational missions

Blackbirds begin overflights of Vietnam and North Korea from Kadena Air Base, Okinawa.

1976

The records that still stand

28 July — 3,529.6 km/h absolute speed and 25,929 m sustained altitude, both still unbeaten by any air-breathing manned aircraft.

1990

A retirement flight for the ages

On its delivery flight to the Smithsonian, an SR-71 crosses the USA — Los Angeles to Washington D.C. — in 64 minutes 20 seconds.

1999

Final flight

After a brief mid-90s reactivation and final service with NASA as a research platform, the last Blackbird flight closes the programme.


Stories & Eyewitnesses

From the cockpit: twelve Blackbird stories

Pilot account

The Los Angeles speed check

A Cessna, a Beechcraft and a Navy F/A-18 ask ATC for ground-speed readouts. Far above them, Brian Shul and Walter Watson key the radio.

Read the full story
“Aspen 20, I show you at one thousand, eight hundred and forty-two knots, across the ground.” The frequency, Shul writes in his book Sled Driver, went silent for the rest of the flight. It became the most retold story in aviation — and every word of it happened on an operational sortie.
Final record flight · 1990

Coast to coast in about an hour

On 6 March 1990, Ed Yeilding and Joseph Vida flew SR-71 #972’s last Air Force flight — its delivery to the Smithsonian.

Read the full story
They made it a statement: Los Angeles to Washington D.C. in 64 minutes and 20 seconds, averaging well over 3,400 km/h and setting four records on a retirement run. The aircraft they parked at Dulles that afternoon hangs in the Udvar-Hazy Center today, still wearing its mission marks.
Test flight · 1966

The man who survived Mach 3.18

Bill Weaver’s SR-71 broke apart around him at 24,000 metres. He never ejected — the aircraft simply disintegrated.

Read the full story
During a January 1966 test flight an inlet unstart pitched the aircraft beyond recovery, and it tore itself apart. Weaver was thrown free unconscious; his pressure suit inflated and saved his life, and he woke up under a parachute he never pulled over New Mexico. A rancher landed beside him in a helicopter minutes later. His RSO Jim Zwayer did not survive — the accident reshaped crew safety procedures for the rest of the programme.
Operation El Dorado Canyon · 1986

Three days over Libya

After the April 1986 airstrikes, Brian Shul and Walter Watson flew three consecutive daily reconnaissance missions over the strike zones.

Read the full story
Their imagery confirmed which targets had been hit — while Libyan missiles rose toward them. The checklist response to a launch warning was the purest expression of the aircraft’s design: push the throttles forward. Shul later wrote that they crossed the Mediterranean faster than a rifle bullet.
Psychological warfare · 1972

The Hanoi sonic boom

In May 1972, three SR-71s overflew North Vietnam in coordination — and their overlapping sonic booms became a weapon of their own.

Read the full story
The thunderclaps over Hanoi rattled guards and prisoners alike; American POWs later described the distinctive double boom as “the sound of freedom” — proof, from 24 kilometres up, that they had not been forgotten.
Operation Giant Reach · 1973

To the Yom Kippur War — from New York

When war erupted in October 1973, Blackbirds mapped the battlefield for Washington, flying round trips of over ten hours from the continental USA.

Read the full story
With European basing politically impossible, crews launched from Griffiss AFB, New York, refuelled repeatedly over the Atlantic, photographed Egyptian and Syrian troop movements at Mach 3, and landed back in the United States the same day. The intelligence shaped American diplomacy through the crisis.
Record run · 1974

New York to London in under two hours

On 1 September 1974, an SR-71 crossed the Atlantic in 1 hour 54 minutes — a record that still stands.

Read the full story
Flown by James Sullivan and Noel Widdifield to the Farnborough Airshow, the crossing averaged over 2,900 km/h including a mid-air refuelling slowdown. Eleven days later the return crew flew London to Los Angeles in 3 hours 47 minutes — landing, by local clocks, nearly four hours before they took off.
Baltic Express · 1987

The day the Swedes escorted a wounded Blackbird

An engine failed at Mach 3 over the Baltic. What happened next stayed classified for 30 years.

Read the full story
On 29 June 1987, an SR-71 lost an engine and descended toward Soviet-patrolled airspace. Swedish Viggen fighters intercepted it — and instead of forcing it away, they flew formation around the crippled jet, shielding it until it reached Danish airspace. In 2018 the Swedish pilots were awarded U.S. Air Medals for an escort that had been secret for three decades.
Signals intelligence · Korea

The “bow-tie” missions and the phantom city

On moonless nights over the Korean DMZ, crews flew looping double-circuit patterns — and once photographed a city that didn’t exist.

Read the full story
During one night sortie the crew spotted a vast field of lights in an otherwise pitch-black country. Debriefing revealed the truth: thousands of Korean fishing boats, their lanterns merging into the illusion of a sprawling metropolis on the sensors.
Persian Gulf · 1987

Finding the Silkworms

Flying from Kadena, Blackbird crews patrolled the Persian Gulf during the Tanker War — and found the missiles threatening the world’s oil shipping.

Read the full story
Their imagery revealed Iranian Silkworm anti-ship missile batteries positioned to strike commercial tankers and the U.S. Navy escorts protecting them — intelligence that reached the fleet within hours.
Secret programme · 1966

The Blackbird’s own drone

Before satellites took over, the Blackbird family briefly carried its own Mach 3 drone on its back. It ended in tragedy.

Read the full story
The M-21 variant carried the D-21, a ramjet reconnaissance drone, on a dorsal pylon. On the fourth launch in July 1966 the drone struck the mothership, destroying it; launch officer Ray Torick was killed. The drone moved to B-52 carriers and flew four missions over China — none of which returned their film. The survivors of the programme sat in storage so secret that even museum curators didn’t know what they were.
Squadron lore · Okinawa

The Habu

Why crews at Kadena wore a snake patch: locals thought the black jet resembled the habu pit viper — and the name stuck.

Read the full story
Crews who completed an operational sortie earned the right to wear the Habu patch — a fraternity smaller than the astronaut corps. To this day, “Habu” is how insiders refer to the aircraft.

Gallery

The Blackbird in pictures

SR-71 banking in flight over snow-covered mountains
The definitive Blackbird portrait: banking over the Sierra Nevada.U.S. Air Force · public domain
SR-71 Blackbird taking off with afterburners lit, shock diamonds visible in the exhaust
J58 afterburners produce visible shock diamonds at full power.NASA · public domain
Full-pressure flight suit worn by SR-71 crews, made by the David Clark Company
At 25,000 m, crews wore full pressure suits — the same later used by Space Shuttle crews.Photo: Omer Wazir · CC BY-SA 2.0
SR-71 Blackbird receiving fuel from a KC-135Q tanker, seen from the boom operator position
Every long mission was choreographed around aerial refuelling with JP-7-dedicated tankers.U.S. Air Force, SGT. P.A. Tubridy · public domain

Watch

The Blackbird in motion

Real Engineering: The Insane Engineering of the SR-71 Blackbird — 10 million views, the definitive technical breakdown.


Operations

Where the Blackbird flew


Combat Record

The score that defines it

Over more than two decades of missions into defended airspace, interceptors scrambled and surface-to-air missiles rose to meet the Blackbird again and again. The outcome never changed.

0Lost to enemy action
12Lost in accidents (of 32 built)
~3,500Operational sorties flown

Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Data as of July 2026.


Questions & Answers

Everything people ask about the SR-71

Can I fly in an SR-71 Blackbird?
No — the SR-71 was retired in 1999 and no airworthy example remains, so flying in one is unfortunately impossible. However, you can fly in several genuine military jets today, including supersonic fighters. See the currently available aircraft and prices at migflug.com/flights-prices/.
What is the fastest aircraft in the world?
The Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird is the fastest air-breathing manned aircraft ever built: 3,529.6 km/h (Mach 3.3), a record set in 1976 and never beaten. Rocket-powered experimental aircraft like the North American X-15 flew faster, but among jet aircraft the Blackbird remains the fastest in the world.
How fast was the SR-71 really?
Officially: 3,529.6 km/h (Mach 3.3), the still-standing record for an air-breathing manned aircraft, set on 28 July 1976. Crews have hinted it could go faster when a missile made it worthwhile — but the official number has never been beaten.
Why did the SR-71 leak fuel on the ground?
By design. The titanium airframe expands several centimetres from friction heat at Mach 3, so panels and tank seams were fitted loosely at rest. On the ramp it dripped JP-7; at cruise, thermal expansion sealed it tight.
How much fuel did the SR-71 burn per hour?
About 36,000–44,000 lbs of JP-7 per hour at Mach 3 cruise — roughly 5,500–6,700 US gallons, or 3–4 gallons every second. The Blackbird carried up to 80,000 lbs in six tanks, usually took off with a partial load, topped up from a KC-135Q tanker right after takeoff, and refuelled about every 90 minutes on long missions.
Was the SR-71 ever shot down?
Never. Despite repeated interception attempts and missile launches over Vietnam, North Korea and the Middle East, no Blackbird was ever lost to enemy action. The twelve aircraft that were lost all went down in accidents.
Why did SR-71 crews wear spacesuits?
At 25,000+ metres, cabin pressure loss would be instantly fatal — blood boils at that pressure at body temperature. Crews wore full pressure suits, functionally the same as early astronaut suits, and pre-breathed pure oxygen before flight.
What replaced the SR-71?
No single aircraft did. Its mission passed to reconnaissance satellites, the U-2 (which outlived its successor), and unmanned systems like the RQ-4 Global Hawk. Persistent rumours of a hypersonic “SR-72” successor remain unconfirmed.
Where can I see an SR-71 today?
All surviving airframes are in museums, including the Smithsonian Udvar-Hazy Center (Virginia), the Imperial War Museum Duxford (UK) — the only one outside the USA — and the Museum of Flight in Seattle.

Sources & Further Reading

Every fact, checked

Hero and gallery photography: U.S. Air Force / NASA, public domain. Combat statistics as of July 2026. Spotted an error? Every page in the Aircraft Museum is fact-checked before publication — write to us and we’ll correct it.