Megaprojects on MSN6d
The Vought XF5-U: That Time America Built a Flying Saucer...Did America really build a flying saucer? During World War II, the U.S. developed the Vought XF5-U, a bizarre, disc-shaped aircraft meant to change aerial combat. But why didn’t it take off?
Vought is a co-author of Project 2025 who served as a platform policy director for the Republican National Committee.
Nick Paumgarten on saving a species. Plus: the fracturing of conservative Christians; a film-critic legend on the Hollywood ...
The Vought F4U Corsair was a flexible fighter aircraft suitable for land and carrier-based operations. Adopted by U.S. Marines in the Pacific and integrated into British and New Zealand fleets ...
Our devastation of nature is so extreme that reversing even a small part of it requires painstaking, quixotic efforts.
Vought’s email follows a similar directive ... to check out new hardware and technology features and highlight the aircraft maker’s delay in delivering updated versions of the Air Force ...
A U.S. Marine from California was identified by military officials Sunday as one of four people killed when a plane ...
President Donald Trump has signed a sweeping executive order to expand the president's control over independent regulatory ...
He joined Triumph in 2016, tasked with restoring investor confidence following the acquisition of Vought Aircraft Industries in 2010. "Over the last few years, Triumph successfully optimized our ...
Some popular U.S. military aircraft have great nicknames — the Vought F-8 Crusader came to be known as the Last of the Gunfighters — while others are less than flattering: The same company's ...
The crash between a regional jet and a military helicopter left 67 dead, including three students and six parents in Fairfax ...
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