Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Moderadores: Glauber Prestes, Conselho de Moderação
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Supermarine Swift FR5 (RAF, Abingdon_England, June 15, 1968)
WK281 / S This Supermatine Swift FR.5 wears its old 79 Squadron markings when on display at the RAF 50th Anniversary show at Abingdon. Now owned by the RAF Museum.
* RAScholefield
WK281 / S This Supermatine Swift FR.5 wears its old 79 Squadron markings when on display at the RAF 50th Anniversary show at Abingdon. Now owned by the RAF Museum.
* RAScholefield
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Convair C-131F (R4Y-1/340-71) [US Navy, Dallas - NAS / Hensley Field_Texas, July 1960]
141016 (cn 299) This is a photo of a R4Y-1 that I photographed back in the summer of 1960 at NAS Dallas. I was at the National Model Airplane Championships that was sponsored by the U.S. Navy. Late in the evening I would walk all over the base trying to take interesting photos of the Navy planes. There is a photo of this plane in the data base shot 46 years after I shot is this photo. I was 16 at the time and all I had was a point and shoot Brownie.
* Darrel Crosby
141016 (cn 299) This is a photo of a R4Y-1 that I photographed back in the summer of 1960 at NAS Dallas. I was at the National Model Airplane Championships that was sponsored by the U.S. Navy. Late in the evening I would walk all over the base trying to take interesting photos of the Navy planes. There is a photo of this plane in the data base shot 46 years after I shot is this photo. I was 16 at the time and all I had was a point and shoot Brownie.
* Darrel Crosby
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
CASA SRF-5A Freedom Fighter [Spain-AF, Weeze (Dusseldorf - Regional_Niederrhein_Laarbruch)_Germany, Oct-1991]
* Berry Vissers
* Berry Vissers
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Eu acho o Swift um avião lindo, principalmente o FR.5, na minha opinião mais bonito que o Hunter(heresia para muitos). Pena que quando conseguiram consertar a maior parte dos problemas dele(na versão FR.5), a RAF já estava de saco cheio e pôs o Swift de lado.Enlil escreveu:This Supermatine Swift FR.5 wears its old 79 Squadron markings when on display at the RAF 50th Anniversary show at Abingdon. Now owned by the RAF Museum.
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Convair F-102A Delta Dagger (USAF, Utrecht - Soesterberg_Netherlands, Late 1960's)
56-1002 32FIS aircraft, not long before the Europe-based F-102s were replaced by F-4Es
* Fred Willemsen
56-1002 32FIS aircraft, not long before the Europe-based F-102s were replaced by F-4Es
* Fred Willemsen
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21MF (Poland-AF, Foggia - Amendola_Italy, May 2000)
6506 (cn 966506) K64 scan
* Aldo Bidini
6506 (cn 966506) K64 scan
* Aldo Bidini
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Lockheed SR-71A Blackbird (USAF, Fairford_Reino Unido, 12 de Julio de 1985)
(61-7979)
* Álgel Osés
>
Caco de para-quedas, acho q amortece a queda até de um MBT ...
(61-7979)
* Álgel Osés
>
Caco de para-quedas, acho q amortece a queda até de um MBT ...
Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Vão me chamar de DOIDO! mas eu acho o Tupolev Tu-95 Bear um dos aviões mais lindos do mundo!
As GATs e RPs estão em toda cidade!
Como diria Bezerra da Silva: "Malandro é Malandro... Mané é Mané..."
Como diria Bezerra da Silva: "Malandro é Malandro... Mané é Mané..."
- MAJOR FRAGUAS
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
sempre achei q parece q esqueceram de colocar uma seção da fuselagem antes da cabine neste biplace.....rsrs
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
Grumman HU-16B/ASW Albatross (Spain-AF, Málaga_España, 1972)
AN.1A-5 / 206-5
Fotógrafo: Juan M. Gonzalez
AN.1A-5 / 206-5
Fotógrafo: Juan M. Gonzalez
- marcelo l.
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Re: Aeronaves da Guerra Fria
B1 perto da aposentadoria.
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article ... 20,00.html
Nixon launched it, Carter killed it and Reagan resurrected it. In its infancy, the Air Force's B-1 bomber was a quick and dirty military metaphor — Republicans wanted to buy weapons to defend the nation from the Soviet Union, and Democrats didn't. Now it could become a different kind of symbol: the Air Force is thinking of retiring its total 66-plane B-1 fleet to hit budget targets set by Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Top Air Force officials met behind closed doors late last week to determine if permanently grounding the B-1 fleet makes sense.
No decision has yet been announced, and there's always a chance the service is bluffing. After all, news of the B-1 early retirement first cropped up in a blog maintained by Air Force magazine, an independent publication whose interests still tend to be pretty much in sync with those of the Air Force itself.
(See the 50 best inventions of 2009.)
But the fact that the topic is even up for discussion is significant for three reasons. First of all, the idea that the B-1's future is in doubt highlights just how tight Air Force leaders believe military budgets are going to get. "The gusher [of post 9/11 defense spending] has been turned off," Gates warned last month, "and will stay off for a good period of time." Secondly, the Air Force seems to be trying to take the initiative in resetting budget priorities, instead of having them imposed from above by Gates or the White House. Finally, the notion that the B-1's fate is in play suggests just how quickly air warfare is changing.
The history of the B-1 Lancer (pilots prefer to call it the "Bone," supposedly stemming from a long-ago typo that left the hyphen out of "B-One") since it went operational in 1986 captures air warfare in a nutshell. It was designed for nuclear war with the Soviet Union, but that mission evaporated with the Cold War's end. Even though the Pentagon still maintains its so-called "nuclear triad" capable of delivering nuclear warheads via submarines, land-based missiles and bombers, the B-1 fleet no longer has that mission (the stealth bomber, now known as the B-2 — whose secret development convinced Carter to kill the B-1 — and lumbering B-52s are assigned that role.)
(See pictures of five nations' space programs.)
So, by default, the B-1 became a conventional bomber, capable of carrying more weapons — up to 24 tons of bombs — than anything else the Pentagon flies. But despite what airpower advocates maintain, the era of Dresden-like bombing is over. The current restrictions on bombing in Afghanistan — where ever smaller and more precisely guided bombs are delivered in ones and twos instead of dozens — show how bombing campaigns have evolved since precision-guided munitions first went mainstream in the Gulf War nearly 20 years ago. And unmanned drones are now capable of dropping bombs without jeopardizing pilots' lives.
(Comment on this story.)
Even if the Air Force decides to retire the fleet, Congress gets the last word. Lawmakers count on the planes to generate jobs back home. "Eliminating or reducing the B-1 fleet would be a terrible mistake and one that I would oppose, especially while America is engaged in two wars and faces numerous threats around the globe," said Senator John Thune, a Republican from South Dakota, whose state's Ellsworth Air Force Base is one of two B-1 bases in the nation.
What's always tough about the possible demise of a weapons system is how its hometown backers tend to be oblivious to the plotting and scheming about its future happening back in the capital. B-1 boosters note that current plans call for the plane to continue flying for another 30 years. A B-1 just appeared at a Berlin air show, and began flight tests of a new targeting system earlier this month in California. "The future of the B-1 is bright and it is going to get brighter," Colonel Charles Sherwin, who helps keep the bomber flying, said earlier this month from a B-1 depot at Oklahoma's Tinker Air Force Base. A colleague, Rick Cantwell, agreed. "The B-1 is here to stay," he said. "It's not going anywhere anytime soon, as far as retirement." If only it were up to him.
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article ... 20,00.html
Nixon launched it, Carter killed it and Reagan resurrected it. In its infancy, the Air Force's B-1 bomber was a quick and dirty military metaphor — Republicans wanted to buy weapons to defend the nation from the Soviet Union, and Democrats didn't. Now it could become a different kind of symbol: the Air Force is thinking of retiring its total 66-plane B-1 fleet to hit budget targets set by Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Top Air Force officials met behind closed doors late last week to determine if permanently grounding the B-1 fleet makes sense.
No decision has yet been announced, and there's always a chance the service is bluffing. After all, news of the B-1 early retirement first cropped up in a blog maintained by Air Force magazine, an independent publication whose interests still tend to be pretty much in sync with those of the Air Force itself.
(See the 50 best inventions of 2009.)
But the fact that the topic is even up for discussion is significant for three reasons. First of all, the idea that the B-1's future is in doubt highlights just how tight Air Force leaders believe military budgets are going to get. "The gusher [of post 9/11 defense spending] has been turned off," Gates warned last month, "and will stay off for a good period of time." Secondly, the Air Force seems to be trying to take the initiative in resetting budget priorities, instead of having them imposed from above by Gates or the White House. Finally, the notion that the B-1's fate is in play suggests just how quickly air warfare is changing.
The history of the B-1 Lancer (pilots prefer to call it the "Bone," supposedly stemming from a long-ago typo that left the hyphen out of "B-One") since it went operational in 1986 captures air warfare in a nutshell. It was designed for nuclear war with the Soviet Union, but that mission evaporated with the Cold War's end. Even though the Pentagon still maintains its so-called "nuclear triad" capable of delivering nuclear warheads via submarines, land-based missiles and bombers, the B-1 fleet no longer has that mission (the stealth bomber, now known as the B-2 — whose secret development convinced Carter to kill the B-1 — and lumbering B-52s are assigned that role.)
(See pictures of five nations' space programs.)
So, by default, the B-1 became a conventional bomber, capable of carrying more weapons — up to 24 tons of bombs — than anything else the Pentagon flies. But despite what airpower advocates maintain, the era of Dresden-like bombing is over. The current restrictions on bombing in Afghanistan — where ever smaller and more precisely guided bombs are delivered in ones and twos instead of dozens — show how bombing campaigns have evolved since precision-guided munitions first went mainstream in the Gulf War nearly 20 years ago. And unmanned drones are now capable of dropping bombs without jeopardizing pilots' lives.
(Comment on this story.)
Even if the Air Force decides to retire the fleet, Congress gets the last word. Lawmakers count on the planes to generate jobs back home. "Eliminating or reducing the B-1 fleet would be a terrible mistake and one that I would oppose, especially while America is engaged in two wars and faces numerous threats around the globe," said Senator John Thune, a Republican from South Dakota, whose state's Ellsworth Air Force Base is one of two B-1 bases in the nation.
What's always tough about the possible demise of a weapons system is how its hometown backers tend to be oblivious to the plotting and scheming about its future happening back in the capital. B-1 boosters note that current plans call for the plane to continue flying for another 30 years. A B-1 just appeared at a Berlin air show, and began flight tests of a new targeting system earlier this month in California. "The future of the B-1 is bright and it is going to get brighter," Colonel Charles Sherwin, who helps keep the bomber flying, said earlier this month from a B-1 depot at Oklahoma's Tinker Air Force Base. A colleague, Rick Cantwell, agreed. "The B-1 is here to stay," he said. "It's not going anywhere anytime soon, as far as retirement." If only it were up to him.
"If the people who marched actually voted, we wouldn’t have to march in the first place".
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
"(Poor) countries are poor because those who have power make choices that create poverty".
ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant