There were Chinese fighter planes and pilots which were to be trained by the Flying Tigers and other pilots. There planes were inferior and the Chinese did not have time to train because the Japanese were attacking them before they could get trained so the Flying Tigers did the aerial fighting. They trained as they could between battling so the Chinese could defend themselves.
See the web link below for the real story of these wonderful heroes and the Chinese Air Force.
The lightest palne was a dog plane
A British fighter plane used during World War 2
A Spitfire was a British fighter plane during World War 2 and a Messerschmitt was a German fighter.
One of the tiniest fighter planes of WWII; the ME-109. Over 33,000 were produced!
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.
SPAD was a French fighter plane in WW1. The Spitfire was a WWII fighter plane.
The lightest palne was a dog plane
A fighter plane used in World War II
A Supermarine Spitfire was a British fighter plane used in world war 2.
A British fighter plane used during World War 2
Zero, a Japanese fighter plane.
Germany's Red Baron flew a peculiar type of fighter plane in World War One. It had three wings and was called the Fokker DR1 triplane.
A Supermarine Spitfire was a British fighter plane used in world war 2.
The Spitfire was used during world war 2 as a fighter plane
Mitsubishi
A Spitfire was a British fighter plane during World War 2 and a Messerschmitt was a German fighter.
A26 fighter plane made by Douglas Aircraft, Long Beach, California