In 2015, Royal Air Force No.29 Squadron celebrated its 100th year in service. To help mark the occasion, one of their Eurofighter Typhoons was painted in special markings depicting, amongst other things, some of the various aircraft flown by the squadron in years gone by. Designed as part of a co-operative effort by Germany, Italy and the UK to produce an air superiority fighter, the Eurofighter was first flown on March 27th, 1994. The Eurofighter is a single-seat, twin-engine, agile combat aircraft used in air-to-air, air-to-ground and tactical reconnaissance roles. It is intentionally aerodynamically unstable, which gives it its high levels of agility—but this means the Typhoon is controlled by a computerized "fly by wire" system instead of by its pilot. The Eurofighter's first rate performance is matched by excellent all round vision and by sophisticated attack, identification and defense systems and stealth technology.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
4 days ago