Canberra The Greatest Multi Role Aircraft Of The Cold War Volume 1

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Canberra: The Greatest Multi-Role Aircraft of the Cold War (Volume 1)

Canberra: The Greatest Multi-Role Aircraft of the Cold War (Volume 1)
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Publisher : Fonthill Media
Total Pages : 630
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Book Synopsis Canberra: The Greatest Multi-Role Aircraft of the Cold War (Volume 1) by : Ken Delve

Download or read book Canberra: The Greatest Multi-Role Aircraft of the Cold War (Volume 1) written by Ken Delve and published by Fonthill Media. This book was released on 2022-07-02 with total page 630 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: — The Canberra introduced the RAF to the era of jet bombers — It was adopted by air forces from South America, India, Australia, New Zealand and the US as the Martin B-57 — Beautifully illustrated with many rare and unpublished photographs — Of interest to aviation and military historians, modellers, gamers and flight simulator enthusiasts An aviation legend designed in the mid-1940s, the English Electric Canberra entered service in 1951 with RAF Bomber Command. It served in the conventional, interdictor and nuclear bomber role with the RAF, Germany, the Middle East and the Far East. Its performance and adaptability made it ideal as a reconnaissance aircraft and the final version, the Canberra PR.9, only finally retired in July 2006. The Canberra was used in many support roles, especially in signals/electronic warfare. The Canberra was adopted by air forces from South America to Africa and India as well as Australia and New Zealand and licence-built as the Martin B-57. It was involved in conflicts from the Suez Crisis and the Malayan Emergency, and various other hot spots with the RAF, to the Australian and USAF ops in Vietnam, and even the Indo–Pakistani War when both sides used Canberras, and the 1982 Falklands War. Used in trials and evaluation, the Canberra held various height and speed records, and NASA’s High Altitude Research Program WB-57s are still active. The Canberra is beloved by many dedicated enthusiasts and aircraft (or cockpits) still survive in museums, as well as some in flying condition.


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