New Releases for January 2020 - Aircraft Carriers (1 Viewer)

jjDesigns

Sergeant
Joined
Apr 21, 2014
Messages
654
NEW RELEASES FOR JANUARY 2020
AIRCRAFT CARRIERS

bh-35_2_.jpg


USS Bunker Hill (CV/CVA/CVS-17, AVT-9) was one of 24 Essex-class aircraft carriers built during World War II for the United States Navy. The ship was named for the Battle of Bunker Hill in the American Revolutionary War. Commissioned in May 1943 and sent to the Pacific Theater of Operations, the ship participated in battles in the Southwest Pacific, Central Pacific and the drive toward Japan through Iwo Jima, Okinawa, and air raids on the Japanese homeland.
While covering the invasion of Okinawa, Bunker Hill was struck by two kamikazes in quick succession, setting the vessel on fire. Casualties exceeded 600, including 346 confirmed dead and an additional 43 missing, the second heaviest personnel losses suffered by any carrier to survive the war after Franklin. After the attack, Bunker Hill returned to the U.S. mainland and was still under repair when hostilities ended.
After the war, Bunker Hill was employed as a troop transport bringing American service members back from the Pacific, and decommissioned in 1947. While in reserve the vessel was reclassified as an attack carrier (CVA), then an antisubmarine carrier (CVS) and finally an Auxiliary Aircraft Landing Training Ship (AVT) but was never modernized and never saw active service again. Bunker Hill and Franklin were the only Essex-class ships never recommissioned after World War II

Fighter Squadron 84 or VF-84 was an aviation unit of the United States Navy. Originally established on 1 May 1944, it was disestablished on 8 October 1945. It was the first US Navy squadron to be designated as VF-84.


bh-35_1_.jpg

BH-35
THE SECOND WORLD WAR,
USS BUNKER HILL,
AIRCRAFT CARRIER FLIGHT DECK CREW,
2 Plane Handlers Pushing with Chocs.
(2pc)



INTER WAR AVIATION
The Interwar Aviation series covers aircraft that were developed and used between World War 1 and World War 2, and was known as the “Golden Age of Aviation.”
In the two decades between the end of World War 1 and the start of World War 2, military aviation underwent a complete transformation. The typical combat aircraft of 1918 was a fabric-covered externally braced biplane with fixed landing gear and open cockpits. Few aero engines developed as much as 250 horsepower, and top speeds of 200 km (120 miles) per hour were exceptional. By 1939 the first-line combat aircraft of the major powers were all-metal monoplanes with retractable landing gear.

iwa-35_2_.jpg




iwa-35_1_.jpg

IWA-35
INTER-WAR AVIATION,
USS SARATOGA (CV-3),
2 PLANE HANDLERS PUSHING,
(2pcs)


**PLEASE CONTACT YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR FURTHER INFORMATION**
 
A set ... or two ... will be making their way to Mid-Coast Maine for sure!
I keep seeing the deck tractor … boy, what an addition that will be ….. when it is released!!!

--- LaRRy
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top