Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tally-Hawk is Quicksilver's Fighting Hawk who is partly metal and partly real. Its beak can tear through metal and can shoot lasers. Side Man is Bluegrass's Fighting Hawk who plays music and fires lasers. Rayzor is Steelheart's Fighting Hawk whose wings can cut through metal. Stronghold is Steelwill's Fighting Hawk who can lift anything that is ...
The Falklands War in 1982 took a heavy toll on the Argentine Air Force, which lost over 60 aircraft. [citation needed]The supply of modern combat aircraft had been restricted since the United States had imposed an arms embargo in 1978 for human rights abuses; [1] there were further restrictions when the United Kingdom also imposed an arms embargo in 1982.
Silver Hawk from 1931 showing close up of hand gear change from the National Motorcycle Museum (UK) The Silver Hawk's 592 cc design was a development of the Silver Arrow and shared a similar frame design and cycle parts, as well as the monoblock 26 degree V [6] with a one-piece OHC head concept. The single bevel-gear overhead camshaft ran ...
The Studebaker Silver Hawk is an automobile produced in 1957, 1958 and 1959 by the Studebaker Corporation of South Bend, Indiana.Studebaker introduced the "Hawk" line in 1956, with four models based on the wheelbase and body of the '53 coupes and hardtops designed by Robert Bourke, as head of the design team Studebaker contracted from Raymond Loewy Associates.
SS Silver Hawk after Hurricane Camille in 1968. SS Skagway Victory was a Victory ship built for the United States during World War II. She was launched by the Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation on June 21, 1944, and was completed on July 15, 1944. The ship's US Maritime Commission designation was VC2-S-AP3, hull number 116 (V-116).
Fighter Squadron 126 (VF-126) was an aggressor squadron of the U.S. Navy, and were known as the Fighting Seahawks, and after 1981 as the Bandits. [1] The squadron was originally established as Attack Squadron 126 (VA-126) on 6 April 1956, it was redesignated VF-126 on 15 October 1965 and disestablished on 1 April 1994.
Mysterious Pilot was adapted from the novel "The Silver Hawk" by William Byron Mowery. [1] [5] Frank Hawks was billed in Mysterious Pilot as the "Fastest airman in the world." [1] After each episode, Hawks appeared to deliver a "flying lesson". A Sikorsky S-39 amphibian was featured in the serial. [6]
CVW-5 Detachment A, comprised F/A-18Cs from VFA-192 and VFA-195, S-3Bs from VS-21 and HH-60's from HS-14, sailed aboard USS Kitty Hawk to the Indian Ocean with a large Special Operations contingent embarked. The Special Operations force moved from USS Kitty Hawk into Afghanistan while the aircraft provided close air support (CAS