Archive for Items Categorized 'Aviation', only excerpts shown, click title for full entry.
Great Aviation Collections of Britain
by Ken Ellis
Britain is at the forefront of the worldwide aviation heritage movement and this book introduces some its foremost collections and explains what makes their key holdings important and how they were acquired.
An Account of Partnership – Industry, Government and the Aero Engine
by M.C. Neale, editor
Bulman played a crucial role in getting Britain’s embryonic WWII aircraft development off the ground. Intrigue and politicking, groundbreaking ideas, all the big names in the aero industry of the day make an appearance.
A Higher Call
by Adam Makos with Larry Alexander
German flak cripples an American bomber. Separated from the herd, it manages to stay aloft. It’s only a matter of time until a German fighter shows up. And then he does. You’ll be surprised what happens next.
Imperial Russian Air Force 1898–1917
Gennady F. Petrov
Hundreds of fabulous photos of things not often seen. Inexpensive. Чего Вы ждете? Пойдите получают это!
Early US Jet Fighters: Proposals, Projects and Prototypes
by Tony Buttler
Not every new idea can work. Even though these aircraft didn’t make the cut, the lessons learned here were necessary stepping stones.
The Birth of the Royal Air Force
by Ian Philpott
Which branch of the military operates stuff that flies? Not always and not everywhere is it the air force. This book fields micro and macro analysis to explain how the oldest independent air force in the world came into being. And what the other services had to say about that.
The Bombing of Rolls-Royce at Derby in Two World Wars
by Kirk, Felix & Bartnik
Industrial sites are a prime bombing target, so much so that the British set up “shadow” factories to fool the enemy. But the actual R-R works took their share of hits, and here’s their story.
Fast Jets, The History of Reheat Development at Derby
by Cyril Elliott, with contributions from John Goodwin
Afterburners are a slick piece of technology. The Rolls-Royce company played a crucial role in pioneering and finessing such work.
Lockheed A-12, The CIA’s Blackbird and Other Variants
by Paul F. Crickmore
You may not know and you may not care but without the A-12’s intelligence-gathering successes the world would have blown up long ago. No kidding. Read why and how here!
Rolls-Royce Motors: The Crewe Years
by Malcolm Bobbitt
Hard to imagine but a mere 64 pages manage to convey one of the best condensed versions of what was this fabled marque’s home for most of its now 110-year history.
Hungarian Fighter Colours 1930–1945
by Dénes Bernád and György Punka
Written specifically with the modeler in mind as sort of an authenticity guide in regards to paint and markings, these excellent books actually do quite a bit more by fleshing out one of the lesser-known chapters of WWII military aviation with extensively researched micro detail.
Fabulous Flying Boats
by Leslie Dawson
Nice overview of flying boats with lots of details on what an actual flight was really like.