No, only two static examples survive, one at RAF Cosford, the other at Brooklands!
No. By definition Beef Wellington is made with meat from the tenderloin. You can make a faux-wellington by wrapping any cut of meat in pastry & duxelles, but it won't be a true Beef Wellington.
Wellington
Wellington is the big city near Wellington
The address of the Historic Wellington Inc is: 1600 Haskell, Wellington, TX 79095
The address of the Wellington Branch Library is: 1951 Royal Fern Drive, Wellington, 33414 1951
two
Vickers Wellington and Avro Lancaster.
The Lancaster and the Wellington
i dont know im asking you?
Airworthy
Airworthy.
As long as the plane is airworthy and does not crash, there should not be any health issues.
Yes, but there are very few. In fact, there are only a handful confirmed to be operational worldwide. -The Indonesian Army captured small number of these aircraft at an abandoned Japanese airbase. Most of them were destroyed during the Indonesian National Revolution (1945-1949), however. -The US and Great Britain both attained one of the aircraft for evaluation.
If you mean during World War 2, the most famous fighter aircraft were the Spitfire and Hurricane and the most famous bombers were the Lancaster and Wellington.
Owner or operator.
Any aircraft can fly as long as it can produce enough lift from the wings to overcome the weight. Additional to that the aircraft needs to be of airworthy status
All certified airworthy aircraft engines have data plates attached that gives all the identifying info. If the plate is missing, the engine is not legally airworthy no matter what the actual condition.