Vol Inaugural (Maiden Flight)
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Definition
Le premier vol d'un aéronef nouvellement conçu ou nouvellement construit, marquant le début du programme d'essais en vol avant que le type reçoive la certification réglementaire.
What Is a Maiden Flight?
A maiden flight is the very first time a new aircraft type lifts off the ground under its own power. It marks the transition from theoretical design and ground testing to actual airborne validation. Maiden flights are carefully planned events: flight-test crews rehearse emergency procedures, ground chase aircraft accompany the prototype, and engineers monitor real-time telemetry from hundreds of sensors. Despite exhaustive preparation, maiden flights carry inherent risk because computer models can never fully replicate the complexity of the real atmosphere and actual aerodynamic forces.
Historical Context
The concept of a maiden flight became formalized as aviation matured in the early 20th century. The Wright Flyer's 12-second hop on December 17, 1903 was history's most consequential maiden flight. As aircraft grew more complex through World War I and II, structured flight-test programs evolved. By the jet age, maiden flights became major industrial events, with Boeing, Airbus, and their suppliers watching every telemetry channel in real time.
Key Milestones
- December 17, 1903: Wright Flyer — first sustained powered flight, Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.
- February 9, 1969: Boeing 747 maiden flight at Everett, Washington, piloted by Jack Waddell — ushering in the wide-body era.
- October 22, 2007: Airbus A380 maiden flight from Toulouse — the world's largest commercial airliner.
- December 15, 2009: Boeing 787 Dreamliner maiden flight after high-profile delays, showcasing the composite revolution.
Legacy and Impact
A successful maiden flight triggers the formal flight-test campaign required for a type certificate from regulators such as the FAA or EASA. Typically, a fleet of three to eight prototype aircraft accumulates thousands of flight hours testing performance, systems, and airworthiness across different environmental conditions. Maiden flights also carry enormous commercial significance: they signal to airlines and the market that a program is real, influencing orders and investor confidence. Historic maiden flights are now commemorated annually, a testament to their enduring place in aviation culture.
Related Terms
Administration fédérale de l'aviation (FAA)
L'agence fédérale américaine responsable de la réglementation et de la supervision de tous les aspects de l'aviation civile, y compris la certification des aéronefs, les licences de pilotes et la gestion de l'espace aérien.
Agence de l'Union européenne pour la sécurité aérienne (EASA)
L'agence de l'Union européenne responsable de la réglementation de la sécurité aérienne civile, de la certification des aéronefs et de la supervision de la sécurité dans les États membres.
Certificat de type (TC)
Un document officiel émis par une autorité nationale de l'aviation confirmant qu'une conception d'aéronef — incluant sa structure, ses systèmes et sa motorisation — satisfait toutes les normes de navigabilité applicables.
Wright Flyer
Le premier aéronef motorisé plus lourd que l'air à succès, conçu et construit par Orville et Wilbur Wright, qui effectua quatre brefs vols à Kitty Hawk, en Caroline du Nord, le 17 décembre 1903.