Showing 31 to 40 of 55 search results for 【Order On Telegram: @Chem2Door】Same Day Tryptamines Delivery in San Francisco,.14cf

Gloster Javelin FAW 1

Aircraft & Exhibits, 1955-1975, Cosford, Hangar Four, 84/A/1180

The Javelin was the world’s first twin-jet delta-wing fighter, designed to intercept bombers at high altitudes and at high subsonic speeds. Electronic and radar devices gave it an all-weather capability.

Gloster Javelin FAW I on display in the National Cold War Exhibition Cosford, RAF Museum

GSh-6LP Helmet

Aircraft & Exhibits, Cosford, Hangar Four, 1994/0718/U

Large white, domed shaped helmet with heated perspex face mask.

Image pending

Nudelman N-37 Soviet 37mm Cannon

Aircraft & Exhibits, 1960-1990, Cosford, Hangar Four, 1995/0713/O

Large single barrelled 37mm calibre aircraft cannon mounted in streamlined external fairing on lower starboard nose of MiG 15 aircraft.

Image pending

Boyevaya Mashina Pyekhoty 1

Aircraft & Exhibits, Cosford, Hangar Four, X003-6763

The Russian Boyevaya Mashina Pyekhoty (infantry fighting vehicle) was designed at the height of the Cold War. The BMP-1 went into production in the early 1960’s and marked an important departure from previous armoured personnel carriers.

Image pending

Blackburn Buccaneer S.1, Cockpit Section

Aircraft & Exhibits, 1963-1995, Cosford, Hangar Four, 1995/1002/A

Designed as a low-level maritime strike aircraft, the Blackburn Buccaneer was first used by the Royal Navy.

Blackburn Buccaneer S1 nose-section on display in the National Cold War Exhibition Cosford., © RAF Museum/Iain Duncan

Short Belfast C.1

Aircraft & Exhibits, JAN 1967-OCT 1978, Cosford, Hangar Four, 78/A/1122

Design of this long-range, strategic transport aircraft began in February 1959, with the first flight in January 1964. Only ten of the originally ordered thirty Belfasts were built, all for the RAF.

Large white aircraft with four engines and a high wing configuration, © RAF Museum/Iain Duncan / (c) RAF Museum/ Iain Duncan

British Aerospace SRAAM

Aircraft & Exhibits, Cosford, Hangar Four, 1987/0073/M

As a result of the Vietnam War, which highlighted the need for positive visual identification of targets before missile launch, a new need for a Short Range Air-to-Air Missile (AAM) was created.

Image pending

Lockheed Polaris

Aircraft & Exhibits, Cosford, Hangar Four, 1996/0194/O

The British decision to acquire the Lockheed Polaris was announced in 1962 following the Nassau Agreement with the United States. Polaris was a submarine launched nuclear missile which had entered service in the US Navy in 1961.

Image pending

Mikoyan MiG-21PF

Aircraft & Exhibits, 1966-1989, Cosford, Hangar Four, X003-6783

The MiG-21 was the first Soviet fighter capable of flying faster than twice the speed of sound and is an iconic aircraft of the Cold War years. MiG-21s saw extensive combat action in such diverse conflicts as Vietnam, the Arab-Israeli Wars, the Iran-Iraq War, Afghanistan and Desert Storm.

Mikoyan MiG-21PF | X003-6783, RAF Museum / Iain Duncan

7000lb, Thermo-Nuclear, Yellow Sun, Practice, Inert

Aircraft & Exhibits, Circa 1960-1965, Cosford, Hangar Four, 69/O/109

Yellow Sun was the first thermonuclear weapon developed for operational service in the United Kingdom. Yellow Sun Mk1 was essentially a boosted fission weapon with a yield of about 500Kt. Yellow Sun Mk2 had a larger yield of 1Mt. The name referred to the bomb's casing, which could contain various different warheads.

Image pending