More recently the idea of a dedicated re-usable large
mothership, capable of carrying and launching a spacecraft, has gained interest. The twin fuselage configuration offers the advantage of a clean payload area underneath the wing centre section, without the need for exceptional ground clearance beneath the fuselages. Early concepts included the
Conroy Virtus and Twin-fuselage
Lockheed C-5 Galaxy Shuttle transport aircraft of 1974. Following the success of the
Scaled Composites White Knight prototype the
White Knight Two was developed and built, with the first example
VMS Eve designed to carry the
SpaceShipTwo suborbital passenger craft for
Virgin Galactic. The
Scaled Composites Stratolaunch, informally known as the
Roc, has the longest wingspan of any aircraft ever flown, at . It is owned by
Stratolaunch Systems, who are currently developing the air-launched spacecraft envisaged as its payload. NASA have flown a scaled-down demonstrator of a rocket-assisted
Towed glider air-launch system, in which the laden twin-fuselage mothership is towed to altitude as a glider and released. Its rocket engine then ignites, propelling it to a speed and altitude greater than those of the tow plane. The payload spacecraft is then released. ==Significant one-offs==