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F-4 Phantom II
Conceptually similar
F-4 Phantoms Ready for Launch on Aircraft Carrier
F-4 Phantoms on Aircraft Carrier, Canopies Open
F-4 Phantoms on Aircraft Carrier
F-4 Phantom II Catapault Launch Preparations
F-4B Phantom II Approaching Carrier
RF-4B Positioned for Carrier Launch from USS Constellation
F-4 Phantom II in Flight
F-4B Phantom Takes Off from USS Independence
F-4 Phantom II Air to Air
F-4C Phantom II Air to Air Refueling
F-4H-I Phantom on Tarmac
F-4 Phantom II in Flight
International F-4 Phantom IIs in Flight
F-4 Phantom II in Flight
F-4B Phantom II on Snowy Ground
F-4B Phantom Takes Off from USS Independence Flightline
Marines Scramble for F-4B Phantom II
F-4A Phantom II Carrier Deck Operations
F-4D Phantom Flightline
F-4 Phantom II Blue Angels Flying Formation
Similar tones
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F-4S Phantom II Goes For Trap on Aircraft Carrier
McDonnell F-4 Phantom II (1958-1979): Some aircraft are memorable for the total number produced, some for length of service, and some for their combat record. It is rare when one airplane becomes known worldwide for all three. Such was the McDonnell Phantom II. The Phantom II was a supersonic jet designed to perform every classical fighter mission ever conceived. It made its first flight on May 27, 1958, and quickly went on to establish 16 speed, altitude and time-to-climb records. In 1959 the Phantom II set the world altitude record at 98,556 feet, and in 1961 it took the world speed record at 1,604 mph. It was the first supersonic jet fighter to serve simultaneously with the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force. In 1969, it became the only fighter ever to fly concurrently with the Air Force’s Thunderbirds and the Navy’s Blue Angels flight demonstration teams. The Phantom II also served in the air arms of eleven other nations. The last of 5,057 St. Louis-built Phantoms was delivered in 1979. Approximately 800 are still in service today.
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Unique identifier
BI2696
Boeing ID
c12-12457-489
Type
Image
Size
5998px × 4781px 82MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
aircraft carriers
airplanes
blur
bodies of water
copy space
day
exteriors
fighters
flying
full body views
gray
grid patterns
ground to air
historic production status
jets
military
military facilities
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
oceans
photos
precision
right front views
runways
scanned from film negative
tarmac
text
viewed from above
watercraft
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