Which WWIIcountry is in the frontier of the aerospace?

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delcyros said:
....That´s what I believe in, too.
However, the Navy archives for the cargo is not accesabble and therefore (as far as I know) not verfiable. The only source I know so far is C.P. Hydricks study "Critical Mass" from 1998, who analyzed material from the Navy archives. He involved some suspicious points in his second part, which descredited his work in the first part (just my opinion).
Can you source outher sorces, RG? Would be fine :)

I really cannot give a reference for this - but I know those drums contained Uranium Oxide in a powdered form.
 
I'll go with the US as the frontier of aerospace, because the powered airplane, supersonic flight and hypersonic flight were born over southern California, even though Britain and Germany were the birthplace of the jet engine, rocket-powered plane, and jet aircraft.
 
I'll go with the US as the frontier of aerospace, because the powered airplane, supersonic flight and hypersonic flight were born over southern California, even though Britain and Germany were the birthplace of the jet engine, rocket-powered plane, and jet aircraft.

Vahe,

PLEASE PLEASE comb through all the old threads you want. BUT PLEASE take any questions you have, summarize them into ONE NEW THREAD and ask them there. ONCE people answer you PLEASE be polite and REPLY to them.

V/R,
Biff
 
I'll go with the US as the frontier of aerospace, because the powered airplane, supersonic flight and hypersonic flight were born over southern California, even though Britain and Germany were the birthplace of the jet engine, rocket-powered plane, and jet aircraft.

Since when did the Wright Flyer perform its first flight in southern California?
 
So Cal?

Every air enthusiast know the first flight was made in Bridgeport CT in 1901.
17FLIGHT1-jumbo.jpg

First in Flight? Connecticut Stakes a Claim

It is in the paper, it must be true;)
 
Well things have certainly moved on since 2005, once we decide where the Wright brothers flew we can move on to other less serious issues of space exploration.
 

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