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#11
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On 19/01/2015 10:12, Bob (not my real pseudonym) wrote:
On Sun, 18 Jan 2015 19:02:48 -0700, Old Geezerr wrote: On Sun, 18 Jan 2015 06:41:29 -0600, Mitchell Holman wrote: The Ruskies loved the Air Cobra and its nose cannon. The cannon worked as a can opener on nazi tanks. Also seem to remember Finland flew Buffalos and gave the Russians a decent shellacking. Not sure if the Buffalos played any part in that, however... There's more information here on the Finnish use of Brewster aircraft, although perhaps not the Buffalo which would not have gained the Finnish nickname: "Taivaan Helmi" "Pearl of the Skies". http://www.warbirdforum.com/faf.htm For the Buffalo itself it was probably in the Fairey Battle class. RiŠardo -- Moving Things In Stiil Pictures |
#12
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On Mon, 19 Jan 2015 02:12:09 -0800, "Bob (not my real pseudonym)"
wrote: On Sun, 18 Jan 2015 19:02:48 -0700, Old Geezerr wrote: On Sun, 18 Jan 2015 06:41:29 -0600, Mitchell Holman wrote: The Ruskies loved the Air Cobra and its nose cannon. The cannon worked as a can opener on nazi tanks. Also seem to remember Finland flew Buffalos and gave the Russians a decent shellacking. Not sure if the Buffalos played any part in that, however... They did, but their victories owed much to poor training, equipment and tacitcs of the sov air force... |
#13
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Old Geezerr wrote in
: On Sun, 18 Jan 2015 06:41:29 -0600, Mitchell Holman wrote: The Ruskies loved the Air Cobra and its nose cannon. The cannon worked as a can opener on nazi tanks. Dave: Chuck Yeager did too, flew it before he transitioned to P-51s flew aerobatics in them, but did get beat up pretty bad when he lost the engine once and had to take to the chute... |
#14
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Charles Lindbergh wrote in
There is a tremendous amount of of interesting information about the P-39 he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_P-39_Airacobra There is no attribution, but supposedly a modified P-39 won the Thomson trophy in 1946. http://www.airrace.com/1946NAR.html Thompson "R" division 300 miles 10 laps of a 30 mile course Place Pilot Race No Aircraft Speed 1 Alvin "Tex" Johnson 84 P-39Q 373.908 2 Tony LeVier 3 P-38L 370.193 |
#15
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Well I think you shold ask the Finnish Air Force before letting the Buffalo
go, a kill ratio of 31:1 against the soviets..... Airacobra didn't do to badly in russian hands either. Claus Gustafsen "Mitchell Holman" skrev i meddelelsen . .. PVK wrote in news ![]() It would have been better if they'd never gone out the door In hindsight. Ditto for the Whitley and the Defiant. And on the American side, the Vindicator, the Aircobra, the Devestator, the Buffalo........ --- Denne e-mail blev kontrolleret for virusser af Avast antivirussoftware. http://www.avast.com |
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Hawket Thypoon early versions had the same cardoor system.
Claus Gustafsen "Charles Lindbergh" skrev i meddelelsen ... On Mon, 19 Jan 2015 18:27:46 +1030, "Dave Kearton" wrote: ...and they had radios that worked. True! Also, has there ever been another low wing, single seat, monoplane fighter, in active duty, with swinging side cockpit doors (like a car) instead of a sliding canopy? There is a tremendous amount of of interesting information about the P-39 he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_P-39_Airacobra There is no attribution, but supposedly a modified P-39 won the Thomson trophy in 1946. --- Denne e-mail blev kontrolleret for virusser af Avast antivirussoftware. http://www.avast.com |
#17
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![]() "Charles Lindbergh" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Jan 2015 18:27:46 +1030, "Dave Kearton" wrote: ...and they had radios that worked. True! Also, has there ever been another low wing, single seat, monoplane fighter, in active duty, with swinging side cockpit doors (like a car) instead of a sliding canopy? Early Typhoons. Cheers Dave Kearton |
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