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Best Fighter Of The Century, It has to have been or is operational. No X-planes. |
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Jun 24 2006, 01:25 PM
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Cessna 152 Member

Group: Members
Posts: 18
Joined: 24-February 06
From: EGXC, UK
Member No.: 3,207

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How about Eurofighter Typhhon. That thing shifts!!!!!
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Jul 2 2006, 12:31 PM
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Boeing 747 Member
   
Group: Full Access Members
Posts: 271
Joined: 19-December 05
From: KYIP, USA
Member No.: 2,689

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QUOTE(AName @ Jul 1 2006, 05:42 PM) [snapback]91534[/snapback] A guy from my school hit a bird with a Cessna 172... does that count? Oh, I think that surely counts, LOL NICE! -Dave
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Jul 25 2006, 10:27 AM
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Space Shuttle Member
     
Group: Full Access Members
Posts: 716
Joined: 30-December 05
Member No.: 2,779

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QUOTE({DaRk} @ Apr 11 2006, 09:42 AM) [snapback]79366[/snapback] Fw-190 was actually a better plane than the Spitfire, it came too late and in too little numbers to actually affect the course of the war. Wrong, the FW-190 was introduced in '43. It was a better figher than the Early spits, but the XI was designed to spread FW-190s over fields like butter, and they did. The Hurricane is a "better" all around fighter though. Cheaper, faster to built, more repairable, but in a dogfight i'd take the Spitfire. With more ammunition that thing would own everything. I'd probably go with the Spitfire for pre-jetage, and the MiG-29 for today. Remember, missiles do the fighting now, with guns and dogfights (which is for proper fighers) the F-15E would get crunched by a lot of things. The MiG-29 and SU-27's will kill everything easily. Only one which would have a fighting chance would be our Typhoon. Best one at carrying missilies? Probably the Tomcat.
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Jul 25 2006, 02:30 PM
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Space Shuttle Member
     
Group: Banned
Posts: 2,047
Joined: 8-December 04
From: McChord AFB 62 AW
Member No.: 333

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QUOTE(charliepapa @ Jul 25 2006, 07:27 AM) [snapback]95760[/snapback] Wrong, the FW-190 was introduced in '43. It was a better figher than the Early spits, but the XI was designed to spread FW-190s over fields like butter, and they did.
The Hurricane is a "better" all around fighter though. Cheaper, faster to built, more repairable, but in a dogfight i'd take the Spitfire. With more ammunition that thing would own everything.
I'd probably go with the Spitfire for pre-jetage, and the MiG-29 for today. Remember, missiles do the fighting now, with guns and dogfights (which is for proper fighers) the F-15E would get crunched by a lot of things. The MiG-29 and SU-27's will kill everything easily. Only one which would have a fighting chance would be our Typhoon.
Best one at carrying missilies? Probably the Tomcat. None of the planes you mentioned has been proven against the F/A-22 Raptor. So i'd say for the time being nothing can beat the Raptor.
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Jul 29 2006, 04:23 PM
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Space Shuttle Member
     
Group: Full Access Members
Posts: 505
Joined: 11-January 06
From: Frome, Somerset, U.K
Member No.: 2,853

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QUOTE(Ghostrider @ Jul 29 2006, 03:21 PM) [snapback]96498[/snapback] I'd have to say a Cessna 172 with VTOL engine kit ( see here), wing mounted rockets, a rearward gunner (50 cal), a couple AIM-9's, a phoenix, and a forward mounted A-10 cannon. Ownage.  Cessna..... are you listening? This is what the customer really wants!  LOL
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Jul 31 2006, 08:18 PM
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Space Shuttle Member
     
Group: FL350 CREW
Posts: 3,772
Joined: 13-December 04
From: Caloundra, Queensland, Australia
Member No.: 367

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QUOTE(Davister @ Aug 1 2006, 12:54 AM) [snapback]96888[/snapback] My vote is for the Spitfire (or was it the Hurricane?). It fended off the entire Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain with 4 to 1 odds against them, and they had the only (I think) eliptical wings of any fighter.  I liked the Spitfire, very much, as they were also my mum's favourite plane , but I am sure that i Contrary to popular belief, it was the Hurricane, not the Spitfire that saved Britain during the dark days of 1940. The turn-around time (re-arm, refuel etc.) for the Spitfire was 26 minutes. That of the Hurricane, only 9 minutes from down to up again. During the Battle of Britain the time spent on the ground was crucial and as one fitter/mechanic of No. 145 Squadron quipped: "If we had nothing but Spits we would have lost the fight in 1940." The Spitfire was an all metal fighter, slightly faster, had a faster rate of climb and had a higher ceiling, while the Hurricane had a fabric covered fuselage, was quicker to repair and withstood more punishment. With the for's and against's of both fighters they came out about even. The majority of German planes shot down during the four month period were destroyed by Hurricanes. For much of the Battle of Britain, the Spitfires went after the German BF 109s at the higher altitudes, while the Hurricanes attacked the bomber formations flying at lower altitudes. This cost the enemy a total of 551 pilots killed or taken prisoner. During the war a total of 14,231 Hurricanes and 20,334 Spitfires were produced. The famous Rolls-Royce 'Merlin' engine evolved through 88 separate marks and was fitted in around 70,000 Allied aircraft during the six years of war.
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