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To manufacture thousands of airplanes for its World War I allies, the United States would fell acres of spruce.
Vintage Aviation News on MSN8d
Randy's Warbird Profiles: SPAD S.XIII C.1
This installment of Randy's Warbird Profiles explores the Flying Heritage & Combat Armor Museum's meticulously restored SPAD ...
The early attempt at drones in World War II saw the Army Air Forces convert B-17 bombers into remote-controlled flying bombs.
Former Governor of the Central Bank Dr. Indrajith Coomaraswamy stressed the importance and the responsibility on the part of ...
Aircraft automation In 1914, an American, Lawrence Sperry, demonstrated gyroscope-stabilised, straight-and-level flight in ...
Are you preparing for UPSC CSE 2025? Here are questions from GS paper 1 for this week with essential points as the fodder for ...
Secure comms with allies is hard. The Pentagon wants to change that The department is working on an effort to streamline a complex set of classified networks they use with allies and partners.
Step back in time and discover the lesser-known story of Hermann Göring’s rise as a World War I fighter ace. Before he became infamous as a leading Nazi, Göring was a daring pilot in the skies over ...
On Wednesday (June 18), allied aircraft participated in landing exercises on Piibe maantee near Tallinn, which is a public road, to practice interagency cooperation.
You may have noticed that some WWI fighter planes had three wings, but why was this? Did the extra wings help make the aircraft any better at fighting?
An early attempt to keep WWI fighter aircraft from blowing their own propellers to bits when firing was to simply add armor plating to the props, which did keep them from being shredded, but also ...