there are many really slow airplanes that exist. if you want a name of the slowest type of aircraft, that would be an "ultra-light". ultra-lights are airplanes that are not any bigger than a mid size sedan and are made completely out of a light metal frame, a front and back wing made out of light wait plastic and a single engine. an ultra-light goes 60-70 mph tops. gliders, on the other hand can go even slower. even thought they don't have an engine, they are still considered airplanes. there is one other thing though. he Soviet Union once invented an airplane that could hover in mid air with out moving. that was only for a short period of time because the airplanes had many flaws. over all, the slowest "working" airplane that has an engine is an "ultra-light".
My RC plane :D
The 2-dimensional plane (it's a flat surface, usually immobile)
airbus A380
Gloster E28/39
Sloths are the slowest mammals.
It would likely be the Blériot XI with a top speed of 75.6 km/h (47 mph).
The worlds slowest plane is called the helios. it is designed by nasa, runs completely on solar power and a bike goes much faster than it. the plane is a giant wing with more than a dozen small motors and solar panels on the wing. the jet pck
it's the slowest you can fly without dropping out of the sky. It's different from plane to plane, altitude, amount of load etc.
The United States and Germany's economies were the slowest to recover from the depression. (Name it.)
The three toed sloth is the slowest animal in the world.
The plane with the slowest max speed that was ever flown during WWI was the Bleriot XI, manufactured in france, and used primarly for Reconnaissance. It had a top speed of only 47 mph. The slowest American plane was the Aeromarine 40 Flying Boat Trainer Aircraft, with a top speed of 71 mph. The slowest aircraft actually used in battle was the Caproni Ca.1 Heavy Day Bomber, used in Italy, with a top speed of 75 mph. In America it was the Martin MB-1 / Glenn Martin Bomber Reconnaissance / Bomber Aircraft, with a top speed of 104 mph.
what was the name of her plane