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From desert landings in Morocco to combat over Anzio, US Spitfire squadrons flew more than 1,000 miles across North Africa ...
Take this Supermarine Spitfire MK IX HF, for instance. It is the kind of investment that you can actually use. You can climb into its cockpit and feel the pleasure of flying a World War II warbird.
The Spitfire TR IX, pictured at Ardmore Airport in Auckland, is en route to the UK, where it will continue to offer rides. This aircraft, registered as ZK WDQ (civilian) or MH 367 (Royal Air Force ...
Spitfire found in scrapyard to sell for £2 million. ... The TR MK IX, with the serial number SM250, which was originally a single-seater but has been refitted to take a passenger, ...
The Spitfire’s Surprising Role in World War II: More Than Just a Fighter Apart perhaps from the B-17 “Flying Fortress,” no other World War II aircraft is as famous as the Supermarine Spitfire.
A valuable Spitfire once stored at RAF Cosford has been lost to the nation following a deal by the RAF Museum to exchange it for the recovery of another aircraft that it is unlikely to ever receive.
The newly upgraded Spitfire Mark IX had a 1,720 horsepower engine and featured both 20mm cannons and .50 calibre machine-guns. These fighters gave important air support for the D-Day landings, ...