资讯

A century of aircraft design is set to be celebrated at the de Havilland Moth Club’s International Tiger Moth Rally at Woburn on 17 and 18 August. In addition to club members’ Tiger Moth biplanes, a ...
A Tiger Moth has found a new home at an airfield where dozens of the aeroplanes were used to train pilots during World War Two. The biplane has been donated to the Bottisham Airfield Museum ...
It does not necessarily reflect the view of The Herald. A Tiger Moth biplane from World War Two has returned to Cambridgeshire for the first time in 79 years. The De Havilland Tiger Moth was a regular ...
This 1946 Aeronca Chief is ready to fly! It has low time on the engine, prop, and airframe. In 2024, it got a brand new wooden prop, fresh Poly Stits fabric, and new right wing spars, ribs, and tip ...
Two former RNZAF aircraft – a de Havilland DH.82A Tiger Moth (NZ662) and a North American Harvard (NZ1015) – have been transferred from RNZAF Base Ohakea to the Air Force Museum of New Zealand at ...
He gained his license in the de Havilland DH.82 Tiger Moth, he said. Williams obtained his commercial pilot licence in November 1960. Despite having qualifications as a commercial pilot ...
The museum has acquired a de Havilland DH.82A Tiger Moth (NZ662) and a North American Harvard (NZ1015), both formerly part of the Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) Historic Flight. The aircraft, now ...
April 10, 2025, the Hellenic Air Force signed a landmark agreement with the “IKAROS” Foundation to restore two historic aircraft—a C-47A and a De Havilland DH.82 Tiger Moth. Fully funded by the ...
The deal, formalized by Lieutenant General (Pilot) Dimosthenis Grigoriadis, Chief of the HAF General Staff, and a representative of the Foundation, involves the free transfer of two historic ...
Benalla veteran, author, and military historian Doug Williams had an opportunity to see a fully restored Tiger Moth, a plane he would have had lots to do with during his years of service. Photo by ...
Benalla veteran, author, and military historian Doug Williams had an opportunity to see a fully restored Tiger Moth, a plane he would have had lots to do with during his years of service.