Books could be written to cover this subject. By far the best-known and most prolific example would have to be the Douglas DC-3, adopted by the USAAF as the C-47. More than 13,000 were built (total for both versions) and hundreds are still in service around the world.
It depends on the national state of emergency. If there is a state of national emergency then all civilian aircraft are usually grounded and the military have precedence.
true
True
Pearl Harbor used military aircraft and airmen against a military target. New York City was a SUICIDE attack by CIVILIANS using CIVILIAN Aircraft against CIVILIAN targets.
It is acceptable to attack military civilian targets. All sides did it in World War II, Vietnam, etc.
Yes, there are many small aircraft, both civilian and military without night flying equipment.
Pilot is the one who is flies an aircraft.He is responsible for all the controls the aircraft. Military pilots are trained with a different syllabus than civilian pilots, which is delivered by military instructors. This is due to the different aircraft, flight goals, flight situations and chains of responsibility. Many military pilots do transfer over to civilian-pilot qualification after they leave the military, and typically their military experience will be used to grant a civilian pilot's license.
It is unlikely that it could be used as is, but it could probably be used to apply for civilian certification. Even military pilots have to get civilian pilot certificates if they wish to fly non-military aircraft. Check with your state licensing board.
Every military or civilian aircraft in the world has civil or military recognition or registration numbers. All civil aircraft numbers are led by a country code, for instance 'C ' for Canada, 'G' for UK, 'N' for USA and so on.
The numbers listed below are from a high school textbook are estimated. Axis Powers include: Japan military -1,740,000 civilian - 3939,400 Italy military -226,900 civilian - 60,000 Germany military-3,250,000 civilian-2,350,000 5 Primary Allied Powers: United States military-405,000 civilian-68 France military-122,000 civilian-470,000 Britain military-305,800 civilian-60,600 Russia military-11,000,000 civilian-6,700,000 China military-1,400,000 civilian-8,000,000
Inspect and license civilian aircraft.
No. If you live in the US, most of the vapor trails you see on any given day are the products of civilian jetliners, not military aircraft.