The Legacy of Flight

Images from the archives of the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum.

  • By David Romanowski and Melissa Keiser
  • AirSpaceMag.com, September 14, 2010
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Slowed to a mere subsonic speed at a conventional altitude, a Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird refuels from a Boeing KC-135 tanker. Once topped off, the reconnaissance plane will disconnect, fire its afterburners, and return to its preferred cruising altitude and speed—as high as 83,000 feet, as fast as Mach 3.3. No other jet aircraft has ever gone higher or faster.


| 15 of 16 |



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Comments (4)

Can some knowledgeable person comment upon why the
canopy of the distant (of the four) F-51 seems
different from the others. EDITORS' REPLY: According to Melissa Keiser and David Romanowski’s book, “The top three airplanes are P-51Ds, the first model with the distinctive bubble canopy, which improved the pilot’s view toward the rear. Suzy-C, by contrast, is a P51B with the earlier canopy design.”

The caption of photo 9 is not phrased well.
The thousands of men who serviced and flew the B-24 Liberator also deserve some acknowledgment as the "might" of the Mighty Eigth Air Force's daylight campaign.

Note the second P-51 aircraft has a revised tail.

Let me just make an inocuous comment; as an ex-86D driver, your stuff is the first I note each AM.

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