From boxkite to jet


Book Description

Air Vice Marshall E.W. Stedman, who was the first Director of Technical Services of the Canadian Air Force, was at the centre of every major technical development in which the RCAF was involved and as a consequence, his memoirs contain more information of air force engineering problems than are available from any other source.




From Boxkite to Jet


Book Description




From Boxkite to Jet


Book Description




From Boxkite to Jet


Book Description




Boxkite to Jet


Book Description

Biografi over den engelske pilot, racerkører og motoringeniør, Frank B. Halford, som var med til at udvikle engelske flymotorer og de første engelske jetmotorer.




From Boxkite to Jet


Book Description




Making Jet Engines in World War II


Book Description

Our stories of industrial innovation tend to focus on individual initiative and breakthroughs. Hermione Giffard uses the case of the development of jet engines to offer a different way of understanding technological innovation, revealing the complicated mix of factors that go into any decision to pursue an innovative, and therefore risky technology.










Jet Man


Book Description

The story of Frank Whittle – RAF pilot, mathematician of genius, inventor of the jet engine and British hero. 'Wonderful' David Edgerton, TLS 'A fascinating account' Aeroplane Monthly 'Casts new light on the intense, heroic character of Frank Whittle' Leo McKinstry '[A] thorough dissection of the evolution of the jet engine... I recommend this mighty tome unreservedly' Journal of Aeronautical History 'A long overdue corrective of an extraordinary man' James Hamilton-Paterson 'A fine, deeply researched book' Military History Monthly In 1938, a thirty-one-year-old RAF pilot and engineer named Frank Whittle – given special leave to pursue his own startlingly original concept of flight – presented the Air Ministry with a written proposal for a revolutionary jet-powered fighter aircraft. A ready response might have changed the course of history, but Whittle got no reply. In this gripping and insightful biography, Duncan Campbell-Smith charts Whittle's success at building a pre-war jet engine against all the odds – and tracks his desperate struggle to have it launched into active service against Hitler's Luftwaffe. It arrived too late – but nonetheless transformed the future of aviation.