That's a big dangerous puddle. I flew across it once and was pretty happy to see Midway island where our C-40 got gas. Can't imagine getting there in the Pan-Am clipper days. It was pretty sketchy for our F-18s too they played tanker frogger all the way out. 3 aux tanks but even for airplanes that do it all the time you can run into fuel transfer problems and there are not a lot of divert fields On the San Diego-Hawaii-Guam route. I do know that once we had 2 working droptanks and pylons on the wings that the stayed there for the month of the exercise, pulled the centerline to save weight. An odd configuration for an F-18 but handy since the job was dissimilar air and it gave them an odd profile and extra loiter time to plan bad guy stuff.
If I can ever afford a plane I hope it is a Cirrus or something that stalls out at 25mph.
Slepcev (sp?) Storch, or similar kitplane - take off and land in ~50 FEET, as I recall from the days I was considering building a plane. Hey, they still make it! From the website (
www.slepcevstorch.com), it is a 3/4 scale version of the (German) Fieseler Storch, and has the following capabilities:
"By keeping the weight down to a minimum, yet keeping the aircraft structurally still very strong, (+6 -3), the Slepcev Storch is very original in both appearance and performance. The aircraft will fly at 22mph at full flap and 30% of power. Take off run into a 16mph wind is vertical with no forward roll."
Nominal takeoff and landing distances are 50-100 feet. Cruise speed is a mere 70kts, listed endurance is 4 hours with an optional 100L belly tank giving another 3 for a total of 7 hrs (so about 490nm range with extra tank). So, it shines in short-field operations, without a ton of range, but I've got to admit, if I could fit into and had a license to fly one, I think it'd be pretty awesome.
Wouldn't try to fly it to Hawaii, though. I'm pretty sure the plane couldn't physically carry enough fuel to make that flight, even without the pilot.