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To: AngelesCrestHighway

Never heard of such a plane. I assume it’s American? It could fly again.


3 posted on 05/11/2012 9:14:11 AM PDT by Clara Lou
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To: Clara Lou

You never heard of the flying Tigers in Burma?


6 posted on 05/11/2012 9:14:53 AM PDT by AngelesCrestHighway
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To: Clara Lou

Think Flying Tigers.


9 posted on 05/11/2012 9:16:31 AM PDT by X-spurt (Its time for ON YOUR FEET or on your knees)
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To: Clara Lou

Curtis P-40 Warhawk. In British service and, depending on the model, was also known as the Kittyhawk or the Tomahawk.


12 posted on 05/11/2012 9:18:54 AM PDT by catman67
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To: Clara Lou

14 posted on 05/11/2012 9:20:05 AM PDT by AngelesCrestHighway
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To: Clara Lou

15 posted on 05/11/2012 9:20:18 AM PDT by skeeter
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To: Clara Lou
P-40 Curtis Warhawk

Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company was an American aircraft manufacturer that went public in 1916 with Glenn Hammond Curtiss as president. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, the company was the largest aircraft manufacturer in the United States. After Curtiss left the company, it became part of the Curtiss-Wright Corporation. The Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company was created on January 13, 1916 from the Curtiss Aeroplane Company of Hammondsport, New York and Curtiss Motor Company of Bath, New York. In September 1920, the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company underwent a financial reorganization and Glenn Curtiss cashed out his stock in the company for $32 million and retired to Florida. He continued as a director of the company but served only as an advisor on design. Clement M. Keys gained control of the company and it later became the nucleus of a large group of aviation companies.

Very much American!

18 posted on 05/11/2012 9:24:34 AM PDT by Alas Babylon!
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To: Clara Lou
The plane is a Curtiss Wright Hawk 87 this is an American company

In US Army Air Force service its call a P40E “Warhawk”

In UK RAF service its called a Kittyhawk Mk1

But a lot of the public knows them (wrongly) as a “Tigershark” because of the Flying Tiger “Shark mouth” that always seem to get painted on them

21 posted on 05/11/2012 9:27:28 AM PDT by tophat9000 (American is Barack Oaken)
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To: Clara Lou

The P-40 was a pre-war design that was not really very good, by WWII standards, but used by the flying Tigers in China and mostly in the Pacific war. They were under-armed. I see them as kind of a crossover between WWI and WWII aircraft.

They were the planes used by our heroes in the movie Pearl Harbor that they were able to use during the Japanese raid to shoot down some planes.


22 posted on 05/11/2012 9:28:16 AM PDT by cuban leaf (Were doomed! Details at eleven.)
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To: Clara Lou

aka P-40 Kittyhawk


43 posted on 05/11/2012 9:53:25 AM PDT by ol' hoghead (He is not here; for he is risen.)
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To: Clara Lou
You need to go here some time.
60 posted on 05/11/2012 10:13:45 AM PDT by Disambiguator
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