Said no one, ever. Well, the logic behind that is the same regarding the color of an airplane. As I mentioned, white is a color known for reflecting light the best, and black is the exact opposite; it completely absorbs light.
Flying around in a black plane would be pretty awesome aesthetic-wise, I know. This morning I saw a pure white 747 with no markings of any kind land at the Atlanta airport. No colors, no airline livery, nothing except a small black patch near the cockpit which might have been an FAA number.
What could this aircraft have been? MIB(W)? Con-Air? CIA? Factory delivery? Any Ideas? We were having a debate at work the other day about why there are no planes painted black. Obviously the most famous one is the DC9 Playboy had, but why doesn't it seem like there any others? One side of the debate was saying the black weighed more, but I don't see how a color would weigh significantly more than another. I know even a small difference in weight per gallon multiplied by the.
Also early airplanes were mainly metal, so they looked actually pretty good I'd guess unpainted, modern planes are composite materials and would look pretty awful unpainted. The reason is that there is no incentive to. Commercial planes certainly can be painted black, Southwest Airlines used to paint their planes to look like Shamu.
Just google "shamu livery" and you will see lots of commercial planes painted black. A picture of the plane that flew between Sofia, Bulgaria and Amsterdam, the Netherlands. A viral post shared how the unusual aircraft had no markings or branding, leaving many wondering why.
This might seem like a trivial question but, passing through any airport in the world, 99 per cent of the aircraft you encounter will be one colour. Planes are almost always painted white. The third reason is that airplanes are kept cooler by having a white color.
And that's because they work in the same way that light. The black box of an airplane is a safety device meant to help determine what happened in the event of a catastrophic accident, but is it a literal black box? If you're painting an aircraft any color other than white, chances are the aircraft melts into the background. For example, if you have a green plane flying against a backdrop of hills (which are predominantly covered with green trees), chances are birds flying might not notice the aircraft.
As a result, the chances of collision become greater.