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The F-4 Phantom was built in 1959 for the U.S. Navy.; The aircraft set a new low-altitude speed record, doing 902 miles per hour at 125 feet. The Phantom is the only plane of its kind that is ...
Some of the ones that appear on the site are a 1941 Nakajima A6M2 Model 21 Zero, a 1944 North American XP-82, a 1959 McDonnell F4H-1F Phantom II, and plenty more trainers, helicopters, jets ...
The aircraft’s most photo-friendly asset, however, was speed. RF-4Bs flew alone and unarmed deep into unfriendly airspace. “Speed is life,” Phantom pilots liked to say.
The Phantom McDonnell Douglas F4H-1F Phantom II Bu.145310 — a pre-production variant and the 11th one produced before the plane was ultimately re-designated the F-4 in September 1962 — is on ...
The armament loaded on the aircraft on display is a typical configuration for an F-4C in 1967. It consists of four AIM-7E and four AIM-9B air-to-air missiles, and eight 750-pound Mk 117 bombs.
Honeoye Falls, N.Y. — The annual F-4 Cockpit Open House honors military veterans who flew, crewed, maintained, or were involved in the F-4 Phantom Fighter aircraft.
The Phantom McDonnell Douglas F4H-1F Phantom II Bu.145310 — a pre-production variant and the 11th one produced before the plane was ultimately re-designated the F-4 in September 1962 — is on ...
Without power, a Phantom had the glide capability of a brick. Most of us who served around Phantoms will never forget them. I can still hear them in the constant tinnitus and ringing in my ears to ...
Some of the ones that appear on the site are a 1941 Nakajima A6M2 Model 21 Zero, a 1944 North American XP-82, a 1959 McDonnell F4H-1F Phantom II, and plenty more trainers, helicopters, jets ...