Keep going...
Jet powered.
YB 49
Piston powered
XB 35.
Go again.
YB 49
Piston powered
XB 35.
Go again.
Sure thing, Karbin.
C-141.
Probably a C variant.
Probably a C variant.
I think you got it right on the money Karbin. I suck with variant's of cargoes and non-combats, though. They all look the same...
And here's a little treat.
Also state what type of wing design innovation it was the first of.
And here's a little treat.
Also state what type of wing design innovation it was the first of.
Ju 287, Forward Swept wings.
Miggle wrote:
Ju 287, Forward Swept wings.
C-17 airborne drop, heading for Sicily drop zone, Ft. Bragg, NC. Probably doing 120 knots
I'm the same way most of the time. The 141 was easier to tell then most. You get the "B" with the hump over the flight deck and the "C" with the paint jobpace51 wrote:
I think you got it right on the money Karbin. I suck with variant's of cargoes and non-combats, though. They all look the same...
And, No offence rdx, but only two things fall from the sky...... they both have the same I.Q.
Last edited by Karbin (2010-06-13 14:27:32)
why am i hearing "Ride of the Valkyries" when looking @ that pic?rdx-fx wrote:
C-17 airborne drop, heading for Sicily drop zone, Ft. Bragg, NC. Probably doing 120 knots
Hint: It's not an F-16.
Mistubishi F-2
"The first week they separate the men from the boys, the second week, they separate the men from the fools, the third week, the fools jump"Karbin wrote:
And, No offence rdx, but only two things fall from the sky...... they both have the same I.Q.
I never went to military jump school either. 48 or 50 civilian jumps, with military jumpers and instructors (off duty, of course)
Besides, 40% of all aircraft fatalities are in the descent to landing phases. Skip that part, and you've almost doubled your safety margin!
rdx-fx wrote:
C-17 airborne drop, heading for Sicily drop zone, Ft. Bragg, NC. Probably doing 120 knots
8 aircraft, that's up to 800 or so paratroops.burnzz wrote:
why am i hearing "Ride of the Valkyries" when looking @ that pic?
Or, it's 1/6th of a Strategic Brigade Airdrop Phase "A".
Full brigade of 3250 troops, plus their vehicles & equipment in phase "B" drop.
Or, the rough equivalent of dropping the entire Swiss active duty Army (3500) on someone's head, all at once.
These pictures need to be renamed and uploaded onto bf2s, because its pretty easy to cheat.
i don't think some members are worried about you guessing the name of the plane. i think some members are more worried you won't try to guess . . .alexb wrote:
These pictures need to be renamed and uploaded onto bf2s, because its pretty easy to cheat.
tbh for pace's i put it into tineye and got the name, then wikid it for the wing design.alexb wrote:
These pictures need to be renamed and uploaded onto bf2s, because its pretty easy to cheat.
Hmmmmmrdx-fx wrote:
"The first week they separate the men from the boys, the second week, they separate the men from the fools, the third week, the fools jump"Karbin wrote:
And, No offence rdx, but only two things fall from the sky...... they both have the same I.Q.
I never went to military jump school either. 48 or 50 civilian jumps, with military jumpers and instructors (off duty, of course)
Besides, 40% of all aircraft fatalities are in the descent to landing phases. Skip that part, and you've almost doubled your safety margin!
Wonder what the "Fatalities in the descent to landing phases" percentages are for jumping out of a operational aircraft thats going to land in 20 minuets is.
You've seen Mine 2, that's why.burnzz wrote:
why am i hearing "Ride of the Valkyries" when looking @ that pic?rdx-fx wrote:
C-17 airborne drop, heading for Sicily drop zone, Ft. Bragg, NC. Probably doing 120 knots
IAI Lavi.
Yes.User007Gamer wrote:
IAI Lavi.
Can't be bothered, you do another one.
Mig 21
Fuck Israel
Yes.Dilbert_X wrote:
Mig 21