There is no Seahawk Fighter Plane
yes there is, but no it cant.
.....vertically at take-off and landing.
10 months
Hover, take off or land vertically, and fly sideways and backward.
It can take off and land vertically. It can hover like a helicopter, fly sideways or backwards.
It depends it could be 10 jets every year to 10 jets a month
Well technically it could... but it would take an rpg sharpshooter LOL and a crap load of luck :)
It is a fighter jet, with is most notable feature being is ability to take-off and land vertically, giving it the name "Jump jet".
Vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL), usually the domain of helicopters, can also be achieved by the Harrier Jump Jet, and the Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft.
Any that are classified as VTOL (Vertical take off and landing) craft. Some of the most recognizable are the Harrier Jump Jet and the V22 Osprey.
The length of time to assemble a fighter plane depended on the type of plane, the manufacturing plant and which nation was doing the building. At the beginning of the war, the Brits were turning out 400 fighter planes a month. The US could produce more than that a month but we had more types of fighters and companies. I have included a production graph for you on the web site below. This chart does include all types of planes though. Follow the links and references and you may find fighter plane production figures.
30 seconds or so, to fill up a jet fighter from a refueling tanker plane in mid air at 400mph!
A fighter plane in world war 2 is much like what a modern fighter plane is today. These planes are aircraft designed with the intention of shooting down other planes. Planes like the American P-51 Mustang, German ME-109 and Japanese Zero were designed to be as fast and maneuverable as possible while having offensive weapons like machine guns and armor to protect the pilot. They would fly missions to take control of the sky by shooting down the enemies planes.