Tag: Avenger

Avenger at War


Free Download Barrett Tillman – Avenger at War
Charles Scribner’s Sons | 1980 | ISBN: 0684164523 | English | 136 pages | PDF | 133.25 MB
Few people, not even those who flew it and loved it, would claim the Avenger was the best aircraft of World War II. It was overly heavy, burdened with excess equipment it seldom used, and underpowered. But despite its shortcomings, 10,000 were produced between 1942-1945, more than any other US Navy aircraft except the Corsair and Hellcat. The British Fleet Air Arm had 14 squadrons of them (called Tarpons until 1944) and New Zealand also took a number. As a weapons platform the Avenger was supremely adaptable, able to carry bombs, torpedoes, rockets and depth charges, functioning as dive bomber, torpedo bomber, day bomber, night bomber (and even, when flown by Charles Henderson, as an interceptor!). They had a great range capability, often more than their accompanying fighter cover, and they were, above all, rugged, able to sustain damage and yet still get home. No wonder then that Avengers were found from Midway to Guadalcanal, Saigon to Tokyo, Morocco to Normandy, and that they helped destroy 60 Japanese warships. But with all the varieties of missions and locales, the Avenger’s greatest contribution was undoubtedly in the Atlantic where its role in defeating the U-boat wolfpacks was an important factor in winning the war in Europe. While other aircraft played prominent parts in the anti-submarine campaign, none of them performed such a variety as well as the Avenger – detecting, stalking, killing and discouraging U-boats by day and night. Avenger at War portrays this adaptable aircraft in all its guises, under all its flags. It does so with over 150 action photographs and a wealth of personal experiences and eyewitness accounts of Avenger fighting.

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Vulcan RAF’S Atomic Avenger (Aeroplane Icons) (2024)


Free Download Tim McLelland – Vulcan: RAF’S Atomic Avenger (Aeroplane Icons)
Kelsey Publishing | 2014 | ISBN: 1907426787 | English | 132 pages | PDF | 102.75 MB
It is perhaps surprising that the "Swinging Sixties" are now half a century away. Five decades ago, Britain was a country full of optimism and opportunity, freed from years of austerity created by the long, dark years of the Second World War. It was an era when permissiveness and prosperity seemed to be the nation’s future, but it was also a time when Britain faced the possibility of no future at all. During one fearful weekend early in the 1960s, it seemed likely that the United Kingdom was about to face utter destruction, and preparations were made to initiate what would have been the Third World War, even though most of Britain’s people went about their daily lives almost oblivious to the horror that was unfolding inside the military and political corridors of power. The Cuban Missile Crisis was a critical event when the prospect of nuclear war seemed to be almost inevitable, but history records that even though the unthinkable briefly became almost a certainty, the prospect of an all-out nuclear exchange between the East and West was a step that neither of the protagonists were ultimately prepared to take.

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