| RAF Elvington RAF Elvington, located at Elvington, south east of York in Yorkshire was a Royal Air Force bomber base which operated from the beginning of World War II until 1992. RAF_Elvington
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| Fairey Gannet Fairey_Gannet
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| Antonov An-8 Antonov_An-8
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| Antonov An-12 Antonov_An-12
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| Antonov An-26 Antonov_An-26
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| Antonov An-28 Antonov_An-28
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| Antonov An-30 Antonov_An-30
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| Antonov An-38 Antonov_An-38
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| Gulfstream V Gulfstream_V
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| Piper Malibu Piper_Malibu
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| Leeds Bradford International Airport Leeds Bradford International Airport is located in the City of Leeds in West Yorkshire, England. The nearest town is Yeadon, and the airport is sometimes locally referred to as Yeadon Airport. It serves the cities of Leeds and Bradford, as well as the wider Yorkshire region, and is the largest airport within Yorkshire. The airport was in public ownership until May 2007, when it was sold for £145.5Bridgepoint Capital. Leeds_Bradford_International_Airport
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| RAF Gatow Known for most of its operational life as Royal Air Force Station Gatow, or more commonly RAF Gatow, this former Royal Air Force military airbase is in the district of Gatow in south-western Berlin, west of the Havel river, in the borough of Spandau. It was the base for the only known operational use of flying boats in central Europe, and was later used for photographic reconnaissance missions by De Havilland Chipmunks over East Germany. RAF_Gatow
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| Russian aircraft bombings of August 2004 Russian_aircraft_bombings_of_August_2004
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| Aircraft graffiti Talk:Aircraft_graffiti
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| Aermacchi MB-339 Aermacchi_MB-339
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| Mitsubishi MU-2 Mitsubishi MU-2 is one of postwar Japan's most successful aircraft. It is a high-wing, twin-engine turboprop, and has a pressurized cabin. Mitsubishi_MU-2
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| Aero Ae-45 Aero_Ae-45
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| Cessna 150 Talk:Cessna_150
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| Antonov An-225 Talk:Antonov_An-225
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| Zivko Edge 540 The Zivko Edge 540 manufactured by Zivko Aeronautics is a highly aerobatic aircraft. Capable of a 420 degree per second roll rate and a 3,700 foot per minute climb rate, it has been flown to victory on the international Unlimited aerobatics circuit several times since the mid-1990s. A tandem-seat version is sold as the Edge 540T. Zivko_Edge_540
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| Boeing Chinook (UK variants) Boeing_Chinook_(UK_variants)
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| Oceanic Airlines Oceanic Airlines (sometimes called Oceanic Airways) is a fictional airline used in several films and television programs.Its most famous appearance is in Lost, where Oceanic Airlines is featured branded with a highly-stylized logo depicting an Aboriginal dot painting that resembles a bullseye, an island, or an "O" (for Oceanic). The show's storyline begins with the crash of Oceanic Flight 815 on a mysterious island. Oceanic_Airlines
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| Avianca Flight 52 Avianca Flight 52 was a regularly scheduled flight from Bogotá to New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport via Medellín, Colombia's José María Córdova International Airport. On Thursday, January 25, 1990, the aircraft performing this flight, a Boeing 707-321B registered as HK-2016, crashed into the town of Cove Neck, Long Island, New York after running out of fuel. 8 of 9 crew members and 65 of 149 passengers on board were killed. Avianca_Flight_52
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| El Al Flight 1862 On 4 October 1992, El Al Flight 1862, a Boeing 747 cargo plane of the Israeli airline El Al, crashed into the Groeneveen and Klein-Kruitberg flats in the Bijlmermeer (colloquially "Bijlmer") neighbourhood (part of Amsterdam Zuidoost) of Amsterdam, Netherlands. A total of 43 people were killed, consisting of the plane's crew of three and a non-revenue passenger in a jump seat, plus 39 persons on the ground. Many more were injured. El_Al_Flight_1862
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| A2Kafir User_talk:A2Kafir
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| ACBA Midour The Midour is a specialised glider tug aircraft designed and built by the French ACBA aero-club. It is a single-seat low-wing monoplane of largely conventional configuration with fixed tricycle undercarriage. Its wings are based on the 'cranked-wing' design of the Robin DR400. ACBA_Midour
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| Kappa 77 KP 2U-SOVA Kappa 77 KP 2U-SOVA is a two-seat civil utility aircraft designed in the Czech Republic and available in kit form for homebuilding. It is a conventional low-wing monoplane featuring all-metal construction and retractable tricycle undercarriage. It is marketed in the United States by Aero Adventure Aviation. Kappa_77_KP_2U-SOVA
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| Aero Boero AB-115 Aero_Boero_AB-115
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| Lockheed JetStar Lockheed_JetStar
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| Virgin Express N.V. Virgin Express S.A. was an airline created within the Virgin Group. It operated flights mainly to southern Europe from its hub at Brussels Airport. Ticket sales were mainly through the Internet. The airline has merged with SN Brussels Airlines to form Brussels Airlines which started operations on 25 March 2007 Virgin_Express
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| Tupolev Tu-22M Tupolev_Tu-22M
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| EUjet EUjet was a low-cost airline based at Shannon Airport, Ireland. It operated a network of services from its main base at Shannon Airport (SNN), with a hub at Kent International Airport (MSE), Manston, Kent, UK. The airline was sold to a British company, PlaneStation, which also owned Kent airport, for €10m. In July 2005 PlaneStation went out of business with €40m in debts, forcing EUjet to cease operations. EUjet
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| 1996 Charkhi Dadri mid-air collision The 1996 Charkhi Dadri mid-air collision occurred on 12 November 1996 when Saudi Arabian Airlines Flight 763 (SVA 763), a Boeing 747-168B en route from New Delhi, India, to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, collided in mid-air with Air Kazakhstan Flight 1907 (KZK 1907), an Ilyushin Il-76 en route from Shymkent, Kazakhstan to New Delhi, over the village of Charkhi Dadri, Haryana, India. All 349 people on board both flights were killed, making it the deadliest mid-air collision to date. 1996_Charkhi_Dadri_mid-air_collision
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| Courchevel Courchevel is the name of a ski area located in the Savoie region of the French Alps, and part of Les Trois Vallées, the largest linked ski area in the world. Courchevel has an airport (Courchevel Airport) and a highway linking it with the rest of the world. Courchevel
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| Colin McRae Colin Steele McRae, MBE (5 August 1968 Scottish rally driver born in Lanark.The son of five-time British Rally Champion Jimmy McRae and brother of rally driver Alister McRae, Colin McRae was the 1991 and 1992 British Rally Champion and, in 1995, became the first Briton to win the World Rally Championship Drivers' title. Colin_McRae
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| Britannia Airways Britannia Airways was the largest charter airline in the United Kingdom, rebranded as Thomsonfly in 2005. Its main bases were London Gatwick, London Luton, Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle and Glasgow. It was headquartered in Luton, Bedfordshire. Britannia_Airways
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| Bell 222 Bell_222
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| Aerial firefighting Aerial firefighting is the use of aircraft and other aerial resources to combat wildfires. The types of aircraft used include fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters. Smokejumpers and rappellers are also classified as aerial firefighters, delivered to the fire by parachute from a variety of fixed-wing aircraft, or rappelling from helicopters. Chemicals used to fight fires may include water, water enhancers such as foams and gels, and specially-formulated fire retardants. Aerial_firefighting
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| McDonnell Douglas MD-12 McDonnell_Douglas_MD-12
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| National Museum of Flight National Museum of Flight is an aerospace museum at East Fortune Airfield (formerly RAF East Fortune), just south of the village of East Fortune, East Lothian, Scotland. It was founded in 1975 and is now one of the National Museums of Scotland. Aircraft at the museum include an Avro Vulcan V-bomber (serial XM597) used in the Falklands War and a former Dan-Air De Havilland Comet 4c airliner (registration G-BDIX) and a British Airways BAC1-11. National_Museum_of_Flight
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| Singapore Airlines fleet Singapore Airlines fleet features purely wide-body aircraft from five aircraft familiesBoeing 747, the Boeing 777, Airbus A380, Airbus A340, and the Airbus A330. In keeping with its policy of maintaining a young fleet, which stands at an average of 6 years 5 months as at 31 March 2008, it renews its fleet frequently.The airline names its fleet according to plane makes. Singapore_Airlines_fleet
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| SilkAir Flight 185 SilkAir Flight 185, a Boeing 737-36N, registration 9V-TRF, was a scheduled passenger flight from Jakarta, Indonesia to Singapore, which crashed on 19 December 1997 after abruptly plunging into the Musi River from its 35,000 feet cruise altitude, killing all 97 passengers and 7 crew on board. SilkAir_Flight_185
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| Kingfisher Red Kingfisher Red, formerly known as Simplifly Deccan and previously as Air Deccan, is a low-cost class of service offered by Kingfisher Airlines. Kingfisher_Red
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| Air Wales Air_Wales
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| Air Scotland Air Scotland was a low-cost airline based in Glasgow, Scotland. It operated scheduled services from Glasgow International Airport, and other UK airports, to the Mediterranean and Athens using the air operator's certificate of Greece Airways, a Greek registered company and licensed by the Greek Civil Aviation Authority. Air_Scotland
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| Air New Zealand Flight 901 Air New Zealand Flight 901 (TE901) was a scheduled Antarctic sightseeing flight from Auckland Airport in New Zealand. The Antarctic sightseeing flights were operated with McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 aircraft and began in February 1977. On 28 November 1979 the 14th flight crashed into Mount Erebus, killing all 237 passengers and 20 crewmembers aboard. Air_New_Zealand_Flight_901
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| Kosova Airlines Kosova_Airlines
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| List of flying wing aircraft Some aircraft incorporate design elements fundamental to a blended wing design (such as the B-1 Lancer and F-16 Fighting Falcon), but not to the extent that a true flying wing or blended wing body would possess. List_of_flying_wing_aircraft
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| Captainovesen User_talk:Captainovesen
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| Tourist guy tourist guy" was an Internet phenomenon that featured a fake, manipulated photograph of a tourist who appeared in many manipulated pictures after the September 11, 2001 attacks.He is also called numerous other names, including the "accidental tourist" (a humorous reference to the novel and film The Accidental Tourist), "Waldo" (a reference to Where's Waldo?), the "WTC Guy," and the "tourist of death". Tourist_guy
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