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P-26A Peashooter Flight Line
P-26A Peashooter Flight Line
P-26A Peashooter in Flight
P-26A Peashooter on Tarmac
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter Squadron in Flight
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter on Wet Tarmac
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooters Flying in Formation
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooter at Wright AFB
P-26A Peashooters Flying in Formation
P-26A Peashooter on Airfield with Model 247 in Background
P-26B Peashooter with its Flaps Down
Model 281 (Export P-26 Peashooter)
P-26B Peashooter Landing Gear
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
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P-26A Peashooter Assembly Line
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
BI210544
Boeing ID
7231b
Type
Image
Size
4900px × 5900px 27MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
abundance
airplanes
engines
factories
fighters
ground shots
hangars
head on views
historic production status
interiors
manufacturing
military
monoplanes
P-26A Peashooter
perspective lines
photos
Plant I
propeller planes
propulsion systems
repetition
viewed from above
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