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Short Sunderland (AP1566). (Suffixes A through E for Mk I through V, -PN and Vols 1 through 4 for Pilots Notes, General Description, Maintenance, Overhaul and Parts Manuals). London: RAF (Air Publication), 1945. Simper, Robert. River Medway and the Swale. Lavenham, Suffolk, UK: Creekside Publishing, 1998. ISBN 978-0-9519927-7-7. Southall, Ivan ...
A Sunderland Mk III parked up at Hobsonville, December 1944. One Sunderland, NZ4103, was converted for civilian operations in January 1946 and soon afterwards, two of the others were used for training of Tasman Empire Airways Limited (TEAL) flight crew, preparing them for the airline's newly acquired Short Sandringham flying boats ...
In 1944, the Short Shetland, a high-speed, long-range, four-engined flying-boat, was built (with Saunders-Roe providing the wings and detail design work), but the project was abandoned shortly after the end of the war, however conversions and developments of the Sunderland entered service as transports, starting during the war with the Hythe ...
Long-range patrol/reconnaissance flying boat – Sunderland with Hercules engines Short Sunderland IV/Seaford: Q.9/42 OR.119 Twin engine target tug – planned production of Monitor later cancelled – see also Q.1/46 'Miles Monitor TT Mk.1: 10/42 "Special Rotating Wing Glider" used to identify the Hafner Rotabuggy: 11/42 "Special Rotating Wing ...
Hangar 3 and 4 (Historic Hangars) Hawker Tempest II: PR536: Moved to RAF Museum Cosford in 2020 [7] Hangar 3 and 4 (Historic Hangars) Slingsby Grasshopper: Hangar 3 and 4 (Historic Hangars) North American TB-25J Mitchell: 34037 Moved to the Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Centre in 2022 Hangar 5 (The Bomber Hall) Bristol Blenheim IV: L8756 Code ...
Short Sunderland: Sunderland Mk I: United Kingdom: Four-engine general-reconnaissance flying boat aircraft, with a crew of 13. 1939–1946: 146 aircraft. RAF aircraft were operated by No. 10 Squadron RAAF and No. 461 Squadron RAAF. RAF variants were the Sunderland Mk I, Mk II, Mk III and Mk V. Consolidated Catalina: PBY-4 Catalina PBY-5 ...
In contrast, by the end of production over 30,000 Pegasus engines had been built. Aircraft applications ranged from single-engine biplanes to the four-engined Short Sandringham and Sunderland flying boats. Several altitude and distance records were set by aircraft using the Pegasus.
The squadron was re-formed at RAF Pembroke Dock on 16 January 1941 from part of 210 Squadron, initially with three Short Sunderland flying boats. Moved to Freetown, Sierra Leone, on 17 March 1941; Moved to Gambia in March 1943, with detachments to Sierra Leone, Dakar and Liberia; Disbanded on 30 June 1945