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The An-148-100 regional aircraft is the main model of the An-148. It seats 70 passengers at 864 mm (34.0 in) or up to 80 passengers at 762 mm (30.0 in) pitch in a one-class 2+3 seating layout. The aircraft is also configurable in a multiple-class layout which can carry fewer passengers, typically with four abreast business class.
An-148: 2004 regional jet for 68–85 passengers An-158: 2010 stretched version of An-148 for 99 passengers An-168: 2010 business variant of An-148; now called An-148-300 An-170 - proposed enlarged version of An-70 An-171 - proposed maritime patrol version of An-170 An-174: Cancelled: enlarged An-74 with engines below wings An-178: 2015
Beginning Monday, a California law will require credit card networks like Visa and Mastercard to provide banks with special retail codes that can be assigned to gun stores in order to track their ...
CA-140 15 October 1945 — Cancelled, 6 June 1946 (28% completed) — CA-141 — Cancelled, 7 January 1946 CA-142 Cancelled, 12 August 1945 CA-143 Newport News: CA-148 Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia: 1 October 1945 6 March 1948 29 January 1949 27 June 1975 Struck 31 July 1978, Sold for scrap, 25 February 1993 — CA-149 —
A clerk shows a customer a TPM Arms LLC California-legal featureless AR-10 style .308 rifle at the company's booth at the Crossroads of the West Gun Show at the Orange County Fairgrounds on June 5 ...
California Democrats passed new rules Tuesday restricting who can carry loaded weapons in public, successfully reviving a failed attempt to strengthen the state’s concealed carry gun laws ...
M&P10 CA Compliant: features a California Bullet Button, making it compliant for sale to civilians in California. [3] M&P10 Compliant: features a fixed extended stock and non-threaded barrel, making it compliant for sale to civilians in Maryland, New Jersey, and New York. It was available in Massachusetts until the Attorney General, Maura Healy ...
Owing to the interchangeability of the guns, the battleships fitted with the 14-inch/45-caliber guns often had guns of various Marks installed on each turret. [ 3 ] In the 1930s, the Mark 1, 2, 3, and 5 were upgraded to allow for increased charges and muzzle velocities, resulting in the Mark 8, 9, 10, and 12, respectively.