First flight Spitfire MK19 . April 2010.
Premier soleil d’avril en bourgogne, et ce n’est pas un poisson d’avril…! Premier vol du Spitfire MK19, et surtout le laché de Bernard Charbonel (de la patrouille BREITLING JET TEAM) , ur ce magnifique avion, one of the last of the many… Top merci a Christophe pour cette French touch way of life… Ecoutez les passages du spit avec un bon sound system stereo ou un bon casque headset, et la HD sur un bel ecran… ca gaz fort…! – — Reginald J. Mitchell developed a racing seaplane, the Supermarine S6B, which won the Schneider Trophy on 13th September, 1931. During the contest the aircraft reached 340 mph (547 km/h). In 1934 the Air Ministry announced that it was looking for a new fighter plane. Mitchell, whose company was now part of Vickers Aviation, decided to adapt his Supermarine seaplane, in an attempt to meet the requirements of the Royal Air Force. The new all-metal single-seat fighter plane, the Supermarine Spitfire Mk. I, had several technical features of the earlier racing seaplane. It had the same structure and aerodynamic lines. However, it had a new engine, the 1030 hp Rolls Royce Merlin and carried 8 machine-guns. The first Spitfire prototype appeared on 5th March, 1936 and flew at 350 mph (563 km/h) and could ascend at approximately 2500 ft (762 m) per minute. With its slender aerodynamic lines and elliptical-plan wings, it was claimed at the time, to be the smallest and cleanest aircraft that could be constructed around a man and an engine. The Royal …
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