Victory Through Air Power: Difference between revisions
| Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
Looks like the Bristol Type T (but the real one has two rudder). | Looks like the Bristol Type T (but the real one has two rudder). | ||
[[Image:VictoryTAP_0h06m06_what.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:VictoryTAP_0h06m06_what.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
== Blériot Limousine == | |||
[[Image:VictoryTAP_0h06m09_what.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | |||
== Disney's jokes == | == Disney's jokes == | ||
[[Image:VictoryTAP_0h06m52_what.jpg|thumb|500px|none|General shape of Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim's Flying Machine.]] | [[Image:VictoryTAP_0h06m52_what.jpg|thumb|500px|none|General shape of Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim's Flying Machine.]] | ||
[[Image:VictoryTAP_0h06m53_what.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | [[Image:VictoryTAP_0h06m53_what.jpg|thumb|500px|none|]] | ||
Revision as of 01:45, 5 July 2014

Movie (1942)
Note: This is an animated film. The aircraft shown in it are therefore not actual aircraft, however, where a reasonable depiction of an actual aircraft has been created, it has been identified as best as possible.
Starring:
Alexander P. de Seversky (himself)
A cartoon by Disney's studios which tells in the first part, the story of aviation; the second one recalls evolution of air power; the last one introduces A. de Seversky and the theory of his book about future air power and strategy. (note : some airplane are drawn with great accuracy but most have unsual details (for ex. : armament or engine) and a handful are pure caricatures).
Wright Flyer I



Santos Dumont 14-bis

Henri Fabre Hydroplane & Unidentified Aircraft
Flying lower, the first Hydroplane which flew for the first time on 28 March 1910.

Unidentified Aircraft
Looks like the Bristol Type T (but the real one has two rudder).

Blériot Limousine

Disney's jokes


Another White Eagle, the cheapest of all the proposals.


Phillips Multiplane N°3

Santos-Dumont Demoiselle & Robert Esnault-Pelterie REP n°1
Robert Esnault-Pelterie was a french pionneer who studied aircrafts not with pragmatism but with really a scientific mind. He is the inventor of the joystick which was on his REP 1 (the red plane on this screenshot).

Ader Eole
This Flying Swan is in fact the Eole, the first trial of french pioneer Clément Ader. This steam machine made a controversial flight in 1890 but Clément Ader is much more realistic in his opinion in future warfare.

Blériot XI Taxi-Pingouin
Here without engine, it's the aircraft with the shortest wingspan for very first lessons and training limited to taxiing.

Jean-Marie Le Bris Albatros
Joke based on the vintage 1856 winged boat of the frenchman Jean-Marie Le Bris. The original one was just a glider.

Blériot XI


Curtiss D
Eugene Ely took off from the USS Birmingham (14 nov 1910).

Ely landed his Curtiss pusher airplane on a platform on the armored cruiser USS Pennsylvania (18 January 1911).

Curtiss D Hydro

Wright Brothers Model EX
Calbraith Perry Rodgers who flew 4,212 miles in 49 days from New York City to Pasadena (17 september 1911 / 5 november 1911).


Caudron G.3

Farman HF.20 & Etrich Taube caricatures


DFW C.V & Morane-Saulnier L Parasol caricatures

Fokker E.III caricature

Albatros D.II
General shape with incorrect wing struts.

Handley Page O/100

Albatros D.V

SPAD S.VII

Curtiss JN-4 Jenny


Curtiss NC-4

Vickers F.B.27A Vimy Transatlantic

Ryan NYP Spirit of Saint-Louis

Douglas World Cruiser

Lockheed Vega

Lockheed 14 Super Electra

Boeing Model 15
Alias PW-9 for the Army and FB-5 for the Navy. Given to be the first aircraft with a turbocharger despite several aircraft of WW1 have already such device.

Gee Bee R-1 Senior Sportster & Gee Bee Model Z Super Sportster
N° 11 of Jimmy Doolittle (in 1932) and N° 4 (yellow) winner of the 1931 Thompson Trophy (with Lowell Bayles at the controls).
In fact, the two planes never flew together as the Z crashed before the first flight of the R-1.

Bell P-39 Airacobra

Another caricature to illustrate the heavier armament

Ford 5-AT-C Trimotor

Boeing 307 Stratoliner
Registration NC19902 was really worn by one of the Boeing Model 307 Stratoliner.

Boeing 314

Various Aircrafts
An air parade in a tribute to the first aircraft bought by the US Army in which we can recognise (among the next five screenshots) the following shapes : Vultee A-31 Vengeance, Lockheed Ventura / Hudson, Douglas C-54A Skymaster, Douglas A-20 Havoc, Consolidated B-24, Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, Lockheed P-38 Lightning, Consolidated PBY Catalina, Curtiss-Wright C-46 Commando, Martin PBM Mariner and probably many others (but the stream is so dense !).





Unidentified Aircraft
Sopwith F.1 Camel ?

Curtiss P-40B/C Warhawk

SPAD S.XIII

Avro Lancaster
Calling up a ten tons bomb (the future Tallboy), an approximative shape of the Avro Lancaster (the only other bomber with such a load bomb, the Boeing B-29 has a tricycle gear).


Supermarine Spitfire Mk V


A Spitfire (?) attacking german bombers. The single four engine attacking aircraft of the Lutwaffe was then the Focke-wulf Fw 200, a maritime patrol never used in such raid.

Douglas XB-19
The wingspan of the Douglas XB-19 is wider of the first powered flight made by the Wright Brothers.

Blériot XI
A. Seversky's father was one of the very first airmen in Russia, owner of a Blériot XI slighty modified and built by Mikheil Grigorashvili.

Farman HF.3

FBA C ("130 chevaux")

Unidentified Aircraft
A blueprint of a study at the end of the first World War.

Martin NBS-1
USS Alabama hit by a white phosphorus bomb dropped by an Martin NBS-1 during bombing tests led by Col. Mitchell, September 1921. In fact, a flight was dispatched consisting of two Handley-Page O/400 and six NBS-1.

Unidentified Aircraft

Seversky SEV-3

Seversky SEV-3L

Seversky BT-8

Seversky P-35

Junkers Ju-87B Stuka


Fairey Swordfish

Dornier Do 17 Z
Aircrafts on the left and the right of the second rank have a shape similar to the Junkers Ju-88.


Fictionnal German Assault Glider
Looks like some sport glider of the prewar years.

Junkers Ju-52/3m

Mitsubishi Ki-21
December 1941 : british battleship Prince of Wales and Repulse were sunk by Mitsubishi G3M but it's a Ki-21 which is drawn.

Douglas SBD Dauntless

Mitsubishi G4M

Unidentified Japanese Aircraft

Messerschmitt Bf 109

Project LRCF
Has some lines of the future Republic XF-12A, a 1946 prototype for a long-range photo-reconnaissance. The draft of the LRCF is about a much more heavier and powerfull bomber.




Fictitious Bomber
Like a first draft of the future Convair B-36 (which genesis started only a handful months before the movie). Indeed Convair started studies of its Model 36 a twin tail configuration.

Japanese Barrage balloons

Back To:
See also
- Unidentified Aircraft
- Albatros D.II
- Albatros D.V
- Avro Lancaster
- Bell P-39 Airacobra
- Blériot XI
- Boeing 307 Stratoliner
- Boeing 314
- Caudron G.3
- Consolidated B-24 Liberator
- Curtiss D
- Curtiss JN
- Curtiss P-40 Warhawk
- DFW C.V
- Douglas SBD Dauntless
- Douglas XB-19
- Dornier Do 17
- Etrich Taube
- Fairey Swordfish
- Farman F.40
- Farman HF.3
- Farman HF.20
- Fokker E.III
- Ford Trimotor
- Gee Bee Model R
- Gee Bee Model Z
- Handley Page O
- Henri Fabre Hydroplane
- Jean-Marie Le Bris Albatros
- Junkers Ju-52
- Junkers Ju-87 Stuka
- Lockheed Model 14 Super Electra
- Lockheed Vega
- Martin NBS-1
- Messerschmitt Bf 109
- Mitsubishi Ki-21
- Mitsubishi G4M
- Morane-Saulnier L
- Phillips Multiplane N°3
- Ryan NYP
- Santos Dumont 14-bis
- Santos Dumont Demoiselle
- SPAD S.VII
- SPAD S.XIII
- Supermarine Spitfire
- Vickers Vimy
- Wright Flyer I
- Made for Movie