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  2. Aircraft spotting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_spotting

    Aircraft registrations can be found in books, with online resources, or in monthly magazines from enthusiast groups. Most spotters maintained books of different aircraft fleets and would underline or check each aircraft seen. Each year, a revised version of the books would be published and the spotter would need to re-underline every aircraft seen.

  3. Ian Allan Publishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Allan_Publishing

    Ian Allan Publishing was an English publisher, established in 1942, which specialised in transport books. [1] It was founded by Ian Allan.. In 1942, Ian Allan, then working in the public relations department for the Southern Railway at Waterloo station, decided he could deal with many of the requests he received about rolling stock by collecting the information into a book. [2]

  4. Derek Wood (author) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derek_Wood_(author)

    A lifelong and keen aircraft spotter, Derek was a spare time volunteer member of the Royal Observer Corps for nearly fifty years and wrote the history of the Corps in his 1975 book Attack Warning Red : The Royal Observer Corps and the Defence of Britain, 1925 to 1975, later updated in 1992 when the Corps was stood down.

  5. Aircraft Warning Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_warning_service

    All observers received extensive training in aircraft recognition. This training was so successful that it spilled over into the non-AWS population. Aircraft recognition became a significant hobby providing many with thousands of hours of entertainment and spawning many books and publications, including flashcards, on the subject. Many ...

  6. Aircraft recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_recognition

    Royal Observer Corps aircraft spotters during World War II. It was the creed of the British War Department and the Air Ministry, at the start of the war, that accurate recognition of high-flying and fast-moving aircraft was not possible. The spare-time volunteers of the Observer Corps disagreed and between 1938 and 1939 they started developing ...

  7. I-Spy (Michelin) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I-Spy_(Michelin)

    The I-SPY books are a series of around forty small volumes that have sold hundreds of thousands of copies each, totalling sales of 25 million worldwide by 2010. [1] Each book in the I-Spy series covers a different subject, such as I-SPY Cars, I-SPY on the Pavement, I-SPY Churches, I-SPY on a Train Journey, and so on.