Archive for Items Categorized 'Aviation', only excerpts shown, click title for full entry.
Vânator – Romanian Hunter
by Radu Brînzan
“The Most Famous Fighter You Never Heard Of.” Historians, modelers, aviation folk: Now you can explore this elegant machine in what the subtitle rightly calls “Ultimate Detail.”
Fouga Magister
by Tine Soetaert
This 1950s French aircraft was the world’s first tandem jet trainer produced in substantial numbers and this book shows you all its bits, from nose gear shimmy to boundary layer splitter plate. In other words, advanced stuff.
The Belgian Air Service in the First World War
by Walter M. Pieters
This outstanding book chronicles why and how little Belgium became such a big factor in a war in which it found itself involved from the first day to the last.
Royal Prussian Jagdstaffel 30
by Bruno Schmäling & Winfried Bock
This first book of a new series shows a different—and better—approach to working from primary sources and focuses on the human story behind early military aviation.
WO Bentley Rotary Aero Engines
by Tom Dine
The man that did Britain proud in motor racing with his eponymous cars also designed engines for tanks and airplanes and made significant contributions to the very early days of flight.
Boulton Paul Defiant
by Mark Ansell
What’s that behind the cockpit? And why are there things sticking out at the bottom? The Defiant is an interesting bit of kit with an undeservedly poor reputation.
Mikoyan Gurevich MiG-15
by Dariusz Karnas
Primarily intended as a reference for model builders this book shows you were every rivet is and the differences between versions. Some basic history is provided and dozens of color profiles demand attentive study.
Finnish Fighter Colours 1939–1945, Vol. 1
by Kari Stenman & Karolina Hołda
Finnish color schemes, yes. Finnish aircraft, no. This book is all about Western aircraft in the Finnish Air Force. They flew Russian ones too but they’ll be covered in Vol. 2.
Frontiers – A Colonial Dynasty
by Simon Best
New Zealand, that most remote of British colonies. From whalers to Rolls-Royces to two airmen of Maori descent lying buried together on a hilltop in England, this book covers four generations.
American Military Aircraft 1908–1919
by Robert B. Casari
Drumroll: One would think this is well-trodden ground—it is anything but. Casari has been wrestling with this subject for half a century and has now produced the most thorough single-volume compendium, covering all American military aircraft produced domestically or purchased overseas.
German Air Projects 1935–1945, Fighters
by Marek Ryś
Necessity is the mother of all invention but even without the pressures of WW II forcing people to color way outside the lines, the vastness of German inventiveness showcased here is simply amazing.
German Aircraft Instrument Panels, Vol. 1
by Dariusz Karnas
This first installment in a new series called “INSIDE” takes you, well, inside, in this case the cockpits of six German WW II aircraft.







































































Phone / Mail / Email
RSS Feed
Facebook
Twitter