Picture of the day

Caption reads:
Enduring Freedom Patrols Continue Over Arabian Gulf
PULA, CROATIA - OCTOBER 29: An F-14 ''Tomcat'' fighter leads a formation comprised of F/A-18 Hornet strike fighters October 29, 2002 over Pula, Croatia. U.S. Two Croat MiG-21 Fishbed fighter-interceptors flank each side of the formation. U.S. Navy aviation squadrons assigned to Carrier Air Wing Seventeen (CVW-17) sent a detachment to Croatia to participate in Joint Wings 2002, a multinational exercise designed to practice intelligence gathering. (Photo by Dana Potts/U.S. Navy/Getty Images)
 
Neat. This month's Flight Journal has a big writeup on the MiG 21 if anyone's interested, or still reads magazines. :)

The Saab J-21.

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One of the more easily jet-convertible aircraft ever built.

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Also capable of carrying the World's Draggiest ASM Mount:

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That'd be like flying around with a park bench strapped crosswise under the wing.
 
Looks like a good trainer for the F-18 pilots, carrier type long travel undercarriage and twin vertical rudders
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Looks like a good trainer for the F-18 pilots, carrier type long travel undercarriage and twin vertical rudders
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In many of its specifications, the T-X is very similar to the T-38.

Since it's a USAF trainer for now, it'll likely be a great long-lasting trainer for the F-35 and F-22. I don't know if it's carrier-capable (or if it can be easily modified to be so) but if it is it'd likely be a great trainer for the USN and USMC as well.

It looks somewhat like the F-35 and I'll bet handles like one too.
 
Since it's a USAF trainer for now, it'll likely be a great long-lasting trainer for the F-35 and F-22. I don't know if it's carrier-capable (or if it can be easily modified to be so) but if it is it'd likely be a great trainer for the USN and USMC as well.

It looks somewhat like the F-35 and I'll bet handles like one too.

The T-45 has some life in it yet. Meanwhile, I don't see any resemblance between the T-X and the F-35.
 
The Unic P107 Samur halftrack. By 1940, the French army was operating over 2000 of these.

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After 1940, the Germans had most of them, now named the Leichter Zugkraftwagen 37.

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A number were uparmoured in the style of German halftracks, dubbed the U304(f), and sent into service:

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One of the captions:
Soldiers of 442nd Infantry Regiment, U.S. Army, formed from the ethnic Japanese, pass the broken German armored French-made Zugkraftwagen P107 U304 (f) (Unic-Kégresse P107) in Brewer (Bruyeres). France, October 24, 1944.
 
The 442nd Regiment kept busy. This from Wikipedia:

The 442nd Regiment is the most decorated unit in the history of American warfare. The 4,000 men who initially made up the unit in April 1943 had to be replaced nearly two times. In total, about 14,000 men served, earning 9,486 Purple Hearts. The unit was awarded eight Presidential Unit Citations (five earned in one month). Twenty-one of its members were awarded Medals of Honor.

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It's almost as if they had something to prove...:)
 
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