V bomber - définition. Qu'est-ce que V bomber
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est V bomber - définition


V bomber         
  • [[Avro Vulcan XH558]]
  • Vulcan XH534 modified for the reconnaissance role in 1977
  • An [[Avro 707]] in flight during 1951; this type was developed to test the tailless thick delta wing configuration chosen for the Avro Vulcan
  • Buffalo R3/Kite]] test
  • Victor XH649
  • Victor K.2 tanker XL188 in 1990
  • Vickers Valiant B1 XD818, flown by [[Kenneth Hubbard]] during [[Operation Grapple]], preserved at [[Royal Air Force Museum Cosford]]
  • A camouflaged Valiant during the 1960s
  • Three Vulcans in flight during 1957, wearing [[anti-flash white]] paint and darkened roundels
  • Vulcan XM597, showing mission markings from its two Black Buck missions and Brazilian internment.
  • Vickers Valiant B1 XD818, flown by [[Kenneth Hubbard]] during [[Operation Grapple]], at [[RAF Museum Cosford]] in 2006
  • Yellow Sun]] nuclear bomb, photographed under the wing of Valiant XD818 at the [[RAF Museum Cosford]]
MULTI-MODEL CLASS OF STRATEGIC BOMBERS
V Bomber; V-bomber; V-Bomber; V bombers; V Bombers; V-bombers; V-force; RAF strategic bomber
The "V bombers" were the Royal Air Force (RAF) aircraft during the 1950s and 1960s that comprised the United Kingdom's strategic nuclear strike force known officially as the V force or Bomber Command Main Force. The three models of strategic bomber, known collectively as the V class, were the Vickers Valiant, which first flew in 1951 and entered service in 1955; the Avro Vulcan, which first flew in 1952 and entered service in 1956; and the Handley Page Victor, which first flew in 1952 and entered service in 1957.
List of V Bomber dispersal bases         
  • An Avro Vulcan B1A V bomber parked on one of the rapid dispersal points at Filton during a public air display in the 1960s
WIKIMEDIA LIST ARTICLE
V-Bomber Dispersal Bases; List V Bomber dispersal bases
In its early years, the British V bomber force relied on the concept of aircraft dispersal to escape the effects of an enemy attack on their main bases. There were 26 such bases in the late 1950s, in addition to the ten main bases – RAF Coningsby, RAF Cottesmore, RAF Finningley, RAF Gaydon, RAF Honington, RAF Marham, RAF Scampton, RAF Waddington, RAF Wittering (HQ RAF Bomber Command) and RAF Wyton – a total of 36 bases available for the V bomber force.
bomber         
  •  A [[USAAF]] [[B-17 Flying Fortress]] heavy bomber from [[World War II]]
  • British [[Handley Page Type O]], 1918
  • stealth bomber]]
  • A [[Russian Air Force]] [[Tupolev Tu-160]] strategic bomber
MILITARY AIRCRAFT FOR ATTACK OF GROUND TARGETS WITH BOMBS OR OTHER HEAVY ORDNANCE
Bomber aircraft; Bombers; Bomber Aircraft; Bomber squadron; Jet bomber; Bomber plane; Nuclear bomber; Jet Bomber; Bomber jet; Bomber airplane; Bomber aeroplane; Day bomber
(bombers)
1.
A bomber is a military aircraft which drops bombs.
...a high speed bomber with twin engines.
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2.
Bombers are people who cause bombs to explode in public places.
Detectives hunting the London bombers will be keen to interview him.
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Exemples du corpus de texte pour V bomber
1. He was in the Air Ministry, 1'60–63, before promotion to group captain to take command of RAF Finningley, a training base for the V–Bomber Force, at that time the principal delivery instrument of the UKs nuclear deterrent.