An in-depth look at some of the 20th century’s notoriously terrible
aircraft. Many aircraft, some famous and some rare, gained a
reputation for being difficult to fly and sometimes downright
dangerous. This book looks at some of the worst culprits over a period
spanning World War I to the age of supersonic flight. The following
aircraft are included . . . B.E.2: The Royal Flying Corps went to war
in it in 1914. The B.E. was easy to fly and very stable—but it was
difficult to maneuver and very easy to shoot down. Tarrant Tabor: The
Tabor was grotesque, a massive misfit of an experimental bomber that
predictably came to grief on its first flight. Avro Manchester: The
twin-engine Manchester would fly all the way to Berlin and back—only
to burst into flames over its own base. Messerschmitt Me 210: The Me
210 was developed as a successor to Goering’s Destroyer, the Bf 110.
It was a disaster with a phenomenal accident rate. Martin B-26
Marauder: They called the B-26 the “widowmaker,” fast and
powerful, with some savage characteristics. Reichenberg IV: The manned
version of the V-1 flying bomb was a desperation weapon, and its
pilots intended to fly suicide missions against Allied shipping.
Tu-144: Rushed prematurely into its test program to beat the
Anglo-French Concorde, the Tu-144 was intended to be Russia’s
supersonic dream.
Les mer
Dangerous Designs and their Vices
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781783371075
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter