HMAS Albatross (1928) - definição. O que é HMAS Albatross (1928). Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é HMAS Albatross (1928) - definição

SEAPLANE TENDER OF THE ROYAL AUSTRALIAN NAVY LATER TRANSFERRED TO THE ROYAL NAVY AND USED AS A REPAIR SHIP
HMAS Albatross (Seaplane Carrier); HMS Albatross (I23); HMS albatross (I23); HMAS Albatross I; HMAS Albatross (I); HMAS Albatross (carrier); HMAS Albatross (seaplane tender); HMS Albatross (1938); SS Hellenic Prince
  • ''Hellenic Prince'' photographed between 1949 and 1951
  • A Seagull III amphibian being manoeuvred towards the hangar hatch following recovery
  • ''Albatross'' in 1938
  • The launch of ''Albatross'' in 1926

HMAS Albatross (1928)         
HMAS Albatross (later HMS Albatross) was a seaplane tender of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN), which was later transferred to the Royal Navy and used as a repair ship. Albatross was built by Cockatoo Island Dockyard during the mid-1920s and entered service at the start of 1929.
Grumman HU-16 Albatross         
  • Grumman HU-16 Albatross at MacDill AFB Florida 1951 or early 1952
  • Preserved Hellenic AF aircraft at Dekelia AB.
  • RCAF]]
  • BS-02, Museo Nacional de Aeronáutica de Argentina
  • Cockpit of Grumman Albatross N44RD which flew around the world in 1997
  • Chalk's International Airlines Albatross arriving in Miami Harbor from Nassau, Bahamas, in 1987
  • 3-view line drawing of the Grumman UF-2 Albatross
  • CGAS Cape Cod]] in the 1970s.
  • HU-16B of the Argentine Air Force, [[LADE]] 1st flight to Port Stanley, 1972
  • A USAF SA-16A during the [[Korean War]]
  • A Spanish HU-16
  • UF-1 Albatross of the Indonesian Air Force at [[Dirgantara Mandala Museum]]
  • NAS Patuxent River]] in the 1940s
1947 SEARCH AND RESCUE FLYING BOAT FAMILY
Grumman G-64; Grumman Albatross; Grumman SA-16; Grumman HU-16; U-16 Albatross; HU-16; JR2F Albatross; UF Albatross; CSR-110 Albatross; HU-16 Albatros; Conroy Turbo Albatross; SA-16A Albatross; SA/HU-16 Albatros; SA-16 Albatross; HU-16E Albatross; Grumman UF Albatross; Grumman JR2F Albatross; Grumman A-16 Albatross; Grumman CSR-110 Albatross; HU-16 Albatross; Grumman SA-16A Albatross; Shin Meiwa UF-XS; HU-16A Albatross; HU-16B Albatross; Grumman SA-16 Albatross; CSR-110; Grumman SA-16B Albatross; Grumman SHU-16B Albatross; G-111T; JR2F-1
The Grumman HU-16 Albatross is a large, twin–radial engined amphibious seaplane that was used by the United States Air Force (USAF), the U.S.
NCSIST Albatross         
  • NCSIST Albatross, then called the Chung Shyang II UAV, being unveiled publicly in 2007
  • Chengkungling]] Ground with rain cover
  • UAV 9717 on display at CKS Memorial Hall
  • UAV 9717 on display at No.11 Pier
TYPE OF AIRCRAFT
CSIST Chung Shyang II; Chung Shyang II UAV; NCSIST Albatross II; Albatross II
The Albatross, also known as the Chung Xiang II, is a medium unmanned aerial vehicle made by National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology. It is in service with the Republic of China Navy.

Wikipédia

HMAS Albatross (1928)

HMAS Albatross (later HMS Albatross) was a seaplane tender of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN), which was later transferred to the Royal Navy and used as a repair ship. Albatross was built by Cockatoo Island Dockyard during the mid-1920s and entered service at the start of 1929. The ship experienced problems with the aircraft assigned to her during her career: the amphibious aircraft she had been designed for were retired just before the ship entered service, the replacement aircraft could not be catapult-launched from the ship, and a new plane designed specifically to work with the ship began operations after Albatross was demoted from seagoing status in 1933.

After five years in reserve, Albatross was transferred to the Royal Navy to offset the Australian purchase of the light cruiser Hobart. Although the British had little use for a seaplane carrier, the ship found a niche after two aircraft carriers were sunk by the Germans early in World War II. Albatross was initially based in Freetown, Sierra Leone for patrol and convoy escort duties in the southern Atlantic, then was relocated to the Indian Ocean in mid-1942. From late 1943 to early 1944, the vessel underwent conversion into a "Landing Ship (Engineering)" to support the Normandy landings, and was used to repair landing craft and other support vessels off Sword and Juno Beaches. Albatross was torpedoed in October, but survived to be towed back to England and repaired. After repairs completed at the start of 1945, she served as a minesweeper depot ship, but was decommissioned after the war's end.

Albatross was sold into civilian service in August 1946, and after several changes of hands was renamed Hellenic Prince in 1948 and converted into a passenger liner. The vessel was chartered by the International Refugee Organisation to transport refugees from Europe to Australia. Hellenic Prince saw service as a troopship during the 1953 Mau Mau uprising, but was broken up for scrap a year later.