Está atualmente a visualizar o Portugal versão do sítio.
Gostaria de mudar para o seu sítio local?
Última edição

Aeroplane Magazine Halifax Edição especial

English
241 Comentários   •  English   •   Aviation & Transport (Aviation)
Only €7,99
ONE OF THE three British four-engine heavy bombers which
took the night war to Hitler’s heartland, the Handley Page
Halifax contributed in no small way to the destruction and
ultimate surrender of the Third Reich. Unlike its Short Stirling
and Avro Lancaster companions, the Halifax proved a more versatile
design, taking on roles additional to its principle mission with RAF
Bomber Command. Yet its comparatively short period in service and
a production run of 6,176 machines was not without problems.
In its early years from service entry in March 1941, little good could
be said about the Halifax. Its in-built faults found it underpowered, its
performance was lamentable, it suff ered from a vicious swing on
take-off causing inherent undercarriage collapses, and rudder stall
problems often gave fatal results. All round it was a poor design from
Britain’s most famous builder of big bombers! In fact, so bad was the
aircraft that ‘Bomber’ Harris wanted it withdrawn from service and
production switched in favour of the Lancaster. Indeed, his opinion of
owner Frederick Handley Page bordered on the murderous!
Given Britain’s emergency war production such a radical move was
unthinkable. Across the nation, hundreds of factories large and small
were heavily committed to a massive programme supplying Halifax
parts to four huge construction plants laid down to produce this
heavyweight for the RAF. There was simply no time or money to
switch to building a new machine. Instead, Handley Page designers
struggled to improve their unfortunate off spring and it was a good
two years before they succeeded.
To the public, the Halifax was the highly capable stablemate of the
Lancaster and together, the two four-engine machines were hailed as
the fearsome harbingers of doom aimed at laying waste all that was
evil within the Third Reich. But the day of the Halifax proved worth
waiting for.
read more read less
Aeroplane Preview Pages Aeroplane Preview Pages Aeroplane Preview Pages Aeroplane Preview Pages Aeroplane Preview Pages Aeroplane Preview Pages Aeroplane Preview Pages Aeroplane Preview Pages

Aeroplane

Halifax ONE OF THE three British four-engine heavy bombers which took the night war to Hitler’s heartland, the Handley Page Halifax contributed in no small way to the destruction and ultimate surrender of the Third Reich. Unlike its Short Stirling and Avro Lancaster companions, the Halifax proved a more versatile design, taking on roles additional to its principle mission with RAF Bomber Command. Yet its comparatively short period in service and a production run of 6,176 machines was not without problems. In its early years from service entry in March 1941, little good could be said about the Halifax. Its in-built faults found it underpowered, its performance was lamentable, it suff ered from a vicious swing on take-off causing inherent undercarriage collapses, and rudder stall problems often gave fatal results. All round it was a poor design from Britain’s most famous builder of big bombers! In fact, so bad was the aircraft that ‘Bomber’ Harris wanted it withdrawn from service and production switched in favour of the Lancaster. Indeed, his opinion of owner Frederick Handley Page bordered on the murderous! Given Britain’s emergency war production such a radical move was unthinkable. Across the nation, hundreds of factories large and small were heavily committed to a massive programme supplying Halifax parts to four huge construction plants laid down to produce this heavyweight for the RAF. There was simply no time or money to switch to building a new machine. Instead, Handley Page designers struggled to improve their unfortunate off spring and it was a good two years before they succeeded. To the public, the Halifax was the highly capable stablemate of the Lancaster and together, the two four-engine machines were hailed as the fearsome harbingers of doom aimed at laying waste all that was evil within the Third Reich. But the day of the Halifax proved worth waiting for.


SELECCIONAR FORMATO:
Acesso imediato

Ofertas digitais disponíveis:

Edição especial digital Halifax
 
7,99 / issue
Esta edição especial não está incluída numa Aeroplane inscrição. As assinaturas incluem a edição regular mais recente e os novos números lançados durante sua assinatura e começam a partir de €4,83 por edição

Opções de assinatura
As poupanças são calculadas com base na compra comparável de edições únicas durante um período de subscrição anual e podem variar em relação aos montantes anunciados. Os cálculos destinam-se apenas a fins ilustrativos. As assinaturas digitais incluem a última edição e todas as edições regulares lançadas durante a sua assinatura, salvo indicação em contrário. O período escolhido será renovado automaticamente, exceto se for cancelado na área A minha conta até 24 horas antes do fim da assinatura atual.

Issue Cover

Aeroplane  |  Halifax  


ONE OF THE three British four-engine heavy bombers which
took the night war to Hitler’s heartland, the Handley Page
Halifax contributed in no small way to the destruction and
ultimate surrender of the Third Reich. Unlike its Short Stirling
and Avro Lancaster companions, the Halifax proved a more versatile
design, taking on roles additional to its principle mission with RAF
Bomber Command. Yet its comparatively short period in service and
a production run of 6,176 machines was not without problems.
In its early years from service entry in March 1941, little good could
be said about the Halifax. Its in-built faults found it underpowered, its
performance was lamentable, it suff ered from a vicious swing on
take-off causing inherent undercarriage collapses, and rudder stall
problems often gave fatal results. All round it was a poor design from
Britain’s most famous builder of big bombers! In fact, so bad was the
aircraft that ‘Bomber’ Harris wanted it withdrawn from service and
production switched in favour of the Lancaster. Indeed, his opinion of
owner Frederick Handley Page bordered on the murderous!
Given Britain’s emergency war production such a radical move was
unthinkable. Across the nation, hundreds of factories large and small
were heavily committed to a massive programme supplying Halifax
parts to four huge construction plants laid down to produce this
heavyweight for the RAF. There was simply no time or money to
switch to building a new machine. Instead, Handley Page designers
struggled to improve their unfortunate off spring and it was a good
two years before they succeeded.
To the public, the Halifax was the highly capable stablemate of the
Lancaster and together, the two four-engine machines were hailed as
the fearsome harbingers of doom aimed at laying waste all that was
evil within the Third Reich. But the day of the Halifax proved worth
waiting for.
ler mais ler menos
Brought to you by Key Publishing Ltd, Europe’s Leading Aviation Publisher.

Published monthly, Aeroplane traces its lineage back to the weekly The Aeroplane launched in June 1911, and is still continuing to provide the best aviation coverage around. Aeroplane magazine is dedicated to offering the most in-depth and entertaining read on all historical aircraft. With a distinct emphasis on military aircraft from the 1930s to the 1960s, the magazine features such icons as the Spitfire, Hurricane, Lancaster and many more.

Regular features include:

• Database: Aeroplane puts historic planes under the spotlight by discussing development, in service details, insights and technical details.
• Aeroplane Meets: Interview series on leading figures from the historic aircraft scene.
• Hangar Talk: Monthly comment column on the historic aircraft world.
• Q&A: Your questions answered
• Aircrew: An insider’s look at the crew that manned legendary aircraft.

And much more!

For more information, visit www.aeroplanemonthly.com

Please note: Posters, calendars or wall planners, plans, decals etc. may not necessarily be included with this digital issue. Please check the specific issue’s description within the app, to see if it is included with that digital version.

Published by Key Publishing Ltd. The entire contents of this title is © copyright 2018. All rights reserved.

Please note: Posters or wall planners included with the printed magazine are currently unavailable with the digital version.

Como subscritor, receberá as seguintes vantagens


•  Um desconto no PVP da sua revista
•  A sua revista entregue no seu dispositivo todos os meses
•  Nunca perderá uma edição
•  Está protegido contra aumentos de preços que possam ocorrer no final do ano

Receberá 12 edições durante um ano Aeroplane assinatura da revista.

Nota: As edições digitais não incluem os artigos de capa ou os suplementos que se encontram nos exemplares impressos.

Sua compra aqui no Pocketmags.com pode ser lida em qualquer uma das seguintes plataformas.


Pode ler aqui no sítio Web ou descarregar a aplicação para a sua plataforma, mas não se esqueça de iniciar sessão com o seu nome de utilizador e palavra-passe Pocketmags.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
O aplicativo Pocketmags funciona em todos os dispositivos iPad e iPhone com iOS 13.0 ou superior, Android 8.0 ou superior e Fire Tablet (Gen 3) ou superior. Nosso leitor web funciona com qualquer navegador compatível com HTML5, para PC e Mac recomendamos Chrome ou Firefox.

Para iOS, recomendamos qualquer dispositivo que possa executar o iOS mais recente para melhor desempenho e estabilidade. Modelos anteriores com especificações mais baixas de processador e RAM podem apresentar renderização de página mais lenta e travamentos ocasionais de aplicativos que estão fora de nosso controle.
4,7
/5
Com base em 241 Comentários de clientes
5
174
4
54
3
11
2
2
1
0
Ver críticas

I have issues from the 1940's

I have issues of the magazine my father purchased in the 1940's. A great read then and a great read now.
Just a shame the early editions are not still available in digital form
Revisto 26 outubro 2023

Aeroplane

I read Aeroplane since 1975. thereafter I bought the magazine when I coud find it in my hometown, Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Revisto 24 novembro 2020

Aeroplane

I have been a major fan of Aeroplane for over fifty years.More power to you arm!! Revisto 20 agosto 2020

Aeroplane

As an American I don't see alot of British a/c in our magazines other than the usual Hurricanes, Spits, and so forth. And I have learned more about the RAF flying more American a/c such as the NA F-86 and the B-29 that you don't read about in American publications. Revisto 13 agosto 2020

Aeroplane

Good articles on rare topics Revisto 15 julho 2020

Artigos desta edição


Segue-se uma seleção de artigos em Aeroplane Halifax.