Looking for something to write about when I came across this picture Attachment 163600 Alas I can't identify the plane which has something, I've never seen that before the observer has a quad machine gun, I bet that rates an "A" for it's rear arch
Looking for something to write about when I came across this picture Attachment 163600 Alas I can't identify the plane which has something, I've never seen that before the observer has a quad machine gun, I bet that rates an "A" for it's rear arch
Photoshopped DH4 "Katheleen"
http://www.theaerodrome.com/forum/ar...p/t-20846.html...according to OTF, (Vol 5,No 1) the KATHELEEN was assigned to the 278th Aero Squadron. Although 278th personnel were assigned to the front on 29 October 1918, their aircraft didn't arrive until after the Armistice. The KATHELEEN's operational service was, then, limited to occupation duties through May 1919.
Last edited by Zoe Brain; 04-29-2015 at 17:49.
So in answer to your question - "Yes".
After looking at "Kathleen" that makes two of us
It's the thought that counts.
Silly Skysters! No one can out research or fool our Zoe!
I wouldn't be much of a Rocket Scientist if they could, would I?
I feel a little sad though. In a few hours, I will no longer have any of my work in space, the first time in 13 years. Some will be on Mercury, or embedded in Mercury, but not in an operational state.
See http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/...&image_id=1600
Of Interest: On April 30th, this region of Mercury's surface will have a new crater! Traveling at 3.91 kilometers per second (over 8,700 miles per hour), the MESSENGER spacecraft will collide with Mercury's surface, creating a crater estimated to be 16 meters (52 feet) in diameter.
Pity you can't get the crater named after your team Zoe.
Rob.
"Courage is the art of being the only one who knows you're scared to death."
Look on the bright side, how many people can say that some of their work is on Mercury (albeit a little scratched)?
Run for your life - there are stupid people everywhere!
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