127 mph to 135 mph :D but they mostly say the maxium is 127 mph.... hoped that helped:)
Only if you are obsessed with fighter planes.
No. The US had some fighter biplanes attached to the USS Macon and USS Akron and those planes were called Sparrowhawks.
kinds of fighter planes
There were a large number of German WW1 fighter aircraft from the Fokker Eindekker to the Fokker DVIII. Albatros, Pfalz, Roland Et.al. manufactured fighter aircraft duing WW1.
Most WW1 aircraft were very small. I have seen replica Sopwith Camel and Spad and were surprised how small and flimsy they appeared to be. Not much different from a Piper Cub, +except for being biplanes.
the Berlin wall and its fighter planes in WW1 and WW2
The armies of France, Britain and Germany during WW1.
Different fighter planes have different capabilities, but somewhere between Mach 1 (the speed of sound) and Mach 3 (three times the speed of sound) has been the general norm for fighter planes in the last five decades. Fighter-bombers are capable of supersonic speeds above Mach 1, but fighter-interceptors can do about Mach 2.5.
Only if you are obsessed with fighter planes.
There were many fighter planes in WW1 and in the 1920's and early 30's.The date you mention was that of the first flight of K5054, the Spitfire prototype.
No. The US had some fighter biplanes attached to the USS Macon and USS Akron and those planes were called Sparrowhawks.
They have an air force. The planes they have are American made fighter jets and Saudi pilots are trained by the American Air Force/services.
There were 70 types of planes in ww1
no
kinds of fighter planes
Fighter planes and bombers.
The A6M is one of the many types of Japanese fighter planes The A6M is one of the many types of Japanese fighter planes