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AT-6 Texan Flight Line, Dallas
Painting the AT-6 Texan Trainer
Air National Guard AT-6 Texan Trainer on Tarmac
Rows of AT-6/SNJ Texan Trainers on Field
Flight Line of Early Model B-25A Mitchells, with a RAF Harvard II in Foreground
Egyptian AT-6 Texan Trainer on Tarmac
AT-6/SNJ Texans Lined Up in Hangar
Air National Guard AT-6 Texan Trainer on Tarmac
North American AT-6 Texan Advanced Trainer
AT-6/SNJ Texan Trainer on the Ground
Newsreel Cameraman Films AT-6 Texans from the Top of a Car
AT-6/SNJ Trainer with Propeller Spinning
SNJ-3 (AT-6 Texan) on Ground
T-6G Texan Trainer on Ground
AT-6 Trainer Aircraft on the Ground with Egyptian Markings
AT-6/SNJ Texan Trainer in Flight
AT-6F Texan on Tarmac at NAA Dallas Facility
AT-6 Texan Trainer with Female Flight Class and Male Instructor
A-36 Invader (P-51 Mustang) in Flight, AT-6 Texan in Background
Two North American Aviation Workers Install an Engine
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Empennage of AT-6 Texans, Photographed as a Color Test
The T-6 Texan two-place advanced trainer was the classroom for most of the Allied pilots who flew in World War II. Called the SNJ by the Navy and the Harvard by the RAF, the T-6 was designed as a transition trainer between basic trainers and first-line tactical aircraft. In all, the T-6 trained several hundred thousand pilots in 34 different countries. A total of 15,495 of the planes were made. Though most famous as a trainer, the T-6 Texan also won honors in World War II and in the early days of the Korean War. The Texan was an evolution of the company's BC-1 basic combat trainer. It was designed by North American Aviation as a low-cost trainer with all the characteristics of a high-speed fighter. Although not as fast as a fighter, it was easy to maintain and repair, had more maneuverability and was easier to handle. A pilot's airplane, it could roll, Immelmann, loop, spin, snap, and vertical roll. It was designed to give the best possible training in all types of tactics, from ground strafing to bombardment and aerial dogfighting, and contained such versatile equipment as bomb racks, blind flying instrumentation, gun and standard cameras, fixed and flexible guns, and just about every other device that military pilots had to operate.
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Unique identifier
BI211940
Boeing ID
84-212b
Type
Image
Size
5100px × 3950px 57MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
abundance
airplanes
blue skies
close-ups
copy space
day
exteriors
flight lines
ground shots
historic production status
military
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
perspective lines
photos
propeller planes
repetition
right side views
structural systems
sunshine
tails
tarmac
trainers
unpainted
vivid color
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