Can't be answered without knowing who made it.
c130
93
Harold H. Martin has written: 'Close-up photography with your camera' -- subject(s): Photography, Close-up 'StarLifter: the C-141' -- subject(s): StarLifter (Transport planes), Starlifter (Jet transport) 'Georgia' -- subject(s): History 'Harold Martin remembers a place in the mountains' -- subject(s): Biography, Description and travel, Journalists, Mountain life 'Father's day comes once a year, and then it always rains' -- subject(s): Child rearing, Personal narratives
7 hours
It differs to some extent depending on how the grading system works in the schools in your area, but generally it will be anywhere from grades 1-3. C works on solidifying addition/subtraction, and introduces multiplication. Source: I work there.
I believe that it is the C5A Starlifter....I was in the Army and they would use these planes to transport tanks and heavy artillery overseas...I don't know the exact weight but I know that once they were loaded on the runway they had to be moved every few hours because if not the weight would compress the runway
The US Navy was involved from start to finish in Vietnam, because it did nearly all of the transporting. One must remember, that today's hi-tech airliners and air transport planes did NOT exist in the 1950's & 1960's. The C-141 Starlifter and C-5 Galaxy existed, along with the workhorse C-130 Hercules, etc. But sea vessels remained the primary method of moving men & equipment to war zones.
As a loadmaster on C-130 and C-141's I remember at least one specific flight on the C-141 where we carried bodies from Viet nam to Travis AFB -they were in body shipping containers (kinda like coffins) and by protocol I had to stay in the back with them the whole flight and the heads had to be toward the front of the plane---This was about 1970.... don't know if this helps............
Made?
Yes. The Earth is much larger than the Moon, so the shadow of the Earth is larger than the shadow of the Moon. And a solar eclipse happens here on the Earth, as the Moon's shadow crosses the Earth; at most, an observer at one spot on the Earth will experience an eclipse that lasts 7 minutes, 30 seconds. (If you could travel across the Earth while remaining in the shadow, like NASA's C141 transport with the large telescope, you could experience a couple of HOURS of eclipse.) For an observer here on Earth, the lunar eclipse happens ON THE MOON, so we can see the whole thing, up to about 90 minutes in duration.
Made