Aeroplane in War

Aeroplane in War

by Claude Grahame-White, Harry Harper

17 chapters6h 58mEnglish1912

About this book

"Although it is still a crude machine—in view of the perfected apparatus which is the aim of thoughtful designers—the aeroplane has demonstrated, in a conclusive way, its value as an instrument of war." - Summary by Authors

Chapters (16)

1REVIEW OF PROGRESS PRIOR TO THE FIRST MILITARY TESTS OF AEROPLANES
2934
2FIRST EXPERIMENTS WITH AEROPLANES IN THE FRENCH AUTUMN MANOEUVRES, 1910
552
3THE GROWING AIR-FLEETS OF FOREIGN NATIONS
1607
4IMPORTANCE OF ORGANISATION IN THE USE OF WAR AEROPLANES
729
5ENGLAND'S POSITION IN REGARDS TO MILITARY FLYING
2154
6WAR AEROPLANES AT THE PARIS AERONAUTICAL EXHIBITION, DECEMBER, 1911
1723
7WHAT EXISTING WAR AEROPLANES CAN ACTUALLY ACCOMPLISH
1866
8WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY AND PHOTOGRAPHY AS AIDS TO AERIAL RECONNAISSANCE
1297
9DEVELOPMENT OF ALL-WEATHER WAR AEROPLANES
1467
10THE TRAINING OF ARMY AIRMEN
2441
11THE COST OF WAR AEROPLANES
2003
12PROBLEM OF ARTILLERY FIRE AND THE AEROPLANE
1497
13DESTRUCTIVE POTENTIALITIES OF WEIGHT-CARRYING AEROPLANES
1051
14WAR IN THE AIR BETWEEN HOSTILE AEROPLANES
763
15VALUE OF THE AEROPLANE IN NAVAL WARFARE
855
16AERIAL WORK IN THE FRENCH AND GERMAN AUTUMN MANOEUVRES, 1911
1678

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment