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P-26 Peashooter
Conceptually similar
P-26A Peashooter on Wet Tarmac
P-26A Peashooter in Flight
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter Flight Line
P-26A Peashooter Flight Line
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter Squadron in Flight
P-26A Peashooter Assembly Line
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter on Airfield with Model 247 in Background
P-26A Peashooters Flying in Formation
P-26A Peashooters Flying in Formation
Model 281 (Export P-26 Peashooter)
P-26B Peashooter with its Flaps Down
P-26B Peashooter on Tarmac
Y1B-9A, B-9 Prototype, in Flight with XP-936, P-26 Peashooter Prototype
The Boeing P-26 and the Boeing Model 247 on the tarmac side by side
P-26B Peashooter Landing Gear
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
P-26A Peashooter on Tarmac
The plucky little P-26 “Peashooter” first flew March 20, 1932. It was the first Boeing all-metal, low-wing monoplane fighter with its wings braced by wires, rather than struts. Powered by a 600-horsepower engine, the 23-foot 7-inch long airplane could fly 234 mph. Its initial high landing speeds were reduced by the addition of wing flaps in the production models. The U.S. Army ordered 126 production-model P-26s, and Boeing built 12 for export. One of a group of P26As, turned over to the Philippine Army late in 1941, was among the first Allied fighters to down a Japanese airplane.
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Unique identifier
BI210540
Boeing ID
7016b
Type
Image
Size
6000px × 4800px 27MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
airplanes
day
exteriors
fighters
full body views
grid patterns
ground shots
historic production status
military
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
photos
propeller planes
rear views
scanned from film negative
structural systems
symmetry
tail elevators
tarmac
text
vertical stabilizers
viewed from above
vintage / retro
wet
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