Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A new version, the F4F-4, entered service in 1941 with six machine guns and the Grumman-patented Sto-Wing folding wing system, [47] [48] which allowed more aircraft to be stored on an aircraft carrier, increasing the number of fighters that could be parked on a surface by more than a factor of 2. The F4F-4 was the definitive version that saw ...
FM-1. 14994 - Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum at Space Coast Regional Airport in Titusville, Florida. It is on loan from the National Naval Aviation Museum at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida. [50] 15392 - National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. [51] FM-2. 16089 - National Naval Aviation Museum at Naval Air Station Pensacola ...
SCAL FB.30 Avion Bassou 1936 2 seat light aircraft, 2 built; Abrams P-1 Explorer 1937, 1 built; SAIMAN LB.2 1937 2 seat monoplane, 1 built; Alliet-Larivière Allar 4, 1938 experimental 2 seat, 1 built [3] General Aircraft GAL.33 Cagnet 1939 trainer, 1 built; WNF Wn 16 1939, Austrian experimental aircraft; General Aircraft GAL.47 1940 ...
FM-2 Wildcat, a fighter aircraft; Lockheed XFM-2, a fighter aircraft; FM2, an album by Foster & McElroy; Farm to Market Road 2, a state-maintained highway in the U.S. state of Texas; FM2 (radio station), a radio station in the Philippines; Front Mission 2, a tactical role-playing game
The Flying Machines FM250 Vampire is a Czech ultralight and light-sport aircraft, designed and produced by Flying Machines s.r.o. of Rasošky, introduced at the Sport Aircraft Show held in Sebring, Florida in 2007. The aircraft is supplied as a complete ready-to-fly-aircraft. [1] [2]
Vultee XA-41 - Prototype ground attack aircraft; Culver PQ-8/A-8 - Radio-controlled target aircraft; Culver PQ-14 Cadet - Radio-controlled target aircraft; Curtiss A-12 Shrike - Attack bomber; Curtiss XA-14/Curtiss A-18 Shrike - Attack bomber; Curtiss-Wright AT-9 Jeep - Advanced twin-engine pilot trainer; Curtiss-Wright C-46 Commando - Transport
Bell FM-1 mockup at Langley wind tunnel. In an effort to break into the aviation business, Bell Aircraft created a unique fighter concept touted to be "a mobile anti-aircraft platform" [2] as well as a "convoy fighter". [3]
The better known F4F Wildcat of World War II was a monoplane development of an improved F3F biplane design. This XF4F-3 prototype clearly shows the family lines.. The first production F3F-1 (BuNo 0211) was delivered on 29 January 1936 to the test group at Naval Air Station Anacostia, with squadron service beginning in March to VF-5B of Ranger and VF-6B of Saratoga.