The Fighter With Its Wings On Backwards

by | Jun 23, 2026 | History & Legends, Military Aviation | 0 comments

Picture a desert morning at Edwards in 1949: dust, sagebrush, and a fighter that looks like someone bolted the wings on the wrong way round. Most aircraft wings are fat where they meet the fuselage and slim to a graceful point at the tip. The Republic XF-91 Thunderceptor did the exact opposite. Its wings were narrow at the root and flared out toward the tips, like a paper dart drawn by an engineer with a grudge against convention. And that was before you noticed it carried a rocket in its belly.

This is the story of an interceptor built to do one job — get up high, very fast, and ruin a Soviet bomber's morning — and the brilliant, bizarre engineering Republic threw at the problem. It is also, gently, a story about timing, because the XF-91 was beaten not by a rival aircraft but by the calendar.

Quick Facts

TypeMixed-propulsion prototype interceptor (1 crew)
First flight9 May 1949, Carl Bellinger at the controls
Powerplant1× GE J47 turbojet + 1× Reaction Motors XLR11 rocket (~6,000 lbf)
WingInverse-taper, variable-incidence — wider at the tip than the root
Top speedMach 1.49; up to ~Mach 1.71 with jet and rocket together
Built2 prototypes (46-680, 46-681); never entered production

Why on earth build the wings backwards?

The XF-91 grew out of Republic's F-84 Thunderjet line, under chief designer Alexander Kartveli, who had been studying captured German research into rocket-boosted interceptors — the Me 163 Komet and the rocket-augmented Me 262 variants. The problem he was wrestling with was a nasty one: swept wings of the era tended to stall at the tips first. When that happens, the center of lift jumps forward, the nose pitches up uncommanded, and the aircraft can tumble out of the sky.

Kartveli's fix was audacious. Make the wing wider in chord at the tip than at the root, so the tips generate more lift and stall last rather than first, letting the whole wing let go smoothly like an old straight-wing trainer. As a bonus, the fat tips had room to swallow the main landing gear, which retracted outward into the wingtips on clever tandem twin wheels.

Then came the second trick: the entire wing could pivot. Tilt the incidence up for takeoff and landing, level it off for high-speed cruise — so the fuselage stayed roughly horizontal while the wing did the heavy lifting, giving the pilot a far better view over the nose.

XF-91 at Edwards 1951
The XF-91 on the South Base ramp at Edwards AFB, 1951. Photo: NASA / Wikimedia Commons

Dark Skies tells the full story of the inverse-tapered interceptor.

A jet for the commute, a rocket for the kill

The other half of the Thunderceptor's personality lived in the tail. A General Electric J47 turbojet handled normal flying; for the climb and the firing pass, the pilot lit a Reaction Motors XLR11 — the same four-chamber liquid-fueled rocket family that pushed the Bell X-1 through the sound barrier — for roughly 6,000 pounds of additional thrust, with each chamber switchable on its own.

The numbers were genuinely startling for 1949. With the afterburning jet and the rocket both lit, the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force records a climb rate of nearly 30,000 feet per minute, and the aircraft could reach around Mach 1.71 in a dash. This was a machine designed to leap, not to loiter.

It is worth pausing on how strange the original concept was. The very first design even fed the rocket on liquid oxygen and water-alcohol, plumbing a research-rocket's fuel system into a fighter that was supposed to scramble at a moment's notice.

“As well as the inverse taper, the variable-incidence wing was to provide a powerful means of trim control in both transonic and supersonic flight.”
David Baker — aviation historian, US Air Power 1945–1990 Vol. 1, quoted by The Aviation Geek Club
XF-91 banking in flight
Thunderceptor in the air — the planform that broke every rule of how a wing should taper. Photo: U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons

The Mach 1 claim — said carefully

Here is where you have to choose your words like a flight engineer. The first prototype, 46-680, rolled out on 24 February 1949 and made its maiden flight on 9 May with Republic test pilot Carl Bellinger at the controls, initially on jet power alone. Reheat and rocket flights followed, and in December 1951 it punched past the speed of sound.

The often-repeated headline is that the XF-91 was “the first American combat-type aircraft to exceed Mach 1 in level flight.” Treat that as a qualified claim, not gospel. The National Museum of the U.S. Air Force phrases it as America's first rocket-powered fighter to fly faster than sound; Wikipedia hedges it to “the first American fighter to exceed Mach 1 in level flight”; and historians note the milestone landed before the North American F-100 Super Sabre did the same on jet thrust alone. The honest summary: it was a genuine first, but the asterisk — rocket-assisted, prototype, level flight — matters.

It was not all triumph. In the summer of 1951 the second prototype suffered an engine failure on takeoff from Edwards; Bellinger got clear just as the tail burned away barely 90 seconds into the flight, and by the time the crash crew had driven across the dry lakebed, the tail section was ash.

XF-91 two prototypes
The two prototypes: 46-680 with its radome nose, and 46-681 after its butterfly-tail rebuild. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Beaten by the calendar, not a dogfight

For all its cleverness, the Thunderceptor had a fatal, unglamorous flaw: it ran out of usefulness faster than it ran out of fuel. With a dash endurance measured in minutes, a point-defense interceptor like this could protect an airfield, not a continent. The U.S. Air Force did the math and decided to wait for the all-weather, radar-equipped, missile-armed interceptors coming out of the 1954 interceptor program — aircraft that beat the XF-91 on speed, range, and loiter time while it sat on the ramp.

So only two were ever built, and neither went to war. The second airframe was rebuilt with a butterfly V-tail, flew on as a test mule, then ended its days as a crash-crew training prop before being scrapped. The first prototype, 46-680, survived — and you can still find it today.

A walk through the Thunderceptor’s design and flight-test career.

“Originally conceived in the mid-1940s as an interceptor, the XF-91 was America’s first rocket-powered fighter to fly faster than the speed of sound.”
National Museum of the U.S. Air Force — XF-91 Thunderceptor fact sheet

The wing that lost the argument but won the legend

The XF-91 belongs to a special category of aircraft: the ones that were brilliantly, fearlessly wrong. The inverse-taper wing solved a real problem, and the legacy of that swept Republic wing carried straight into the production F-84F Thunderstreak. But the answer the Air Force actually wanted — long-legged, all-weather, missile-toting interceptors — made the whole rocket-fighter idea a beautiful dead end almost overnight.

And yet here we are, three-quarters of a century later, still talking about it. The Thunderceptor never shot anything down, never entered service, and never had to. Sometimes the aircraft that fails most interestingly is the one we remember best — the fighter that wore its wings on backwards, lit a rocket in the desert, and dared the future to catch up.

Sources: National Museum of the U.S. Air Force; Wikipedia; The Aviation Geek Club (Dario Leone), citing David Baker, “US Air Power 1945-1990 Vol. 1”.

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