Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first Stingray (Submarine No. 13), was a C-class submarine in commission from 1909 to 1919 that was renamed USS C-2 in 1911 and served during World War I. The second USS Stingray (SS-186) was a Salmon-class submarine in commission from 1938 to 1945 that served during World War II.
SS-9 Octopus / C-1: Lead boat of a class of 5 SS-10 Viper / B-1: Lead boat of a class of 3 SS-11 Cuttlefish / B-2: SS-12 Tarantula / B-3: SS-13 Stingray / C-2: SS-14 Tarpon / C-3: SS-15 Bonita / C-4: SS-16 Snapper / C-5: SS-17 Narwhal / D-1: Lead boat of a class of 3 SS-18 Grayling / D-2: SS-19 Salmon / D-3: SS-19½ Seal / G-1: Lead boat of a ...
They produce many model car kits including road cars, sports racing cars, World Rally Championship cars, and Formula One racing cars. Usually these are 1/24 scale although the Formula One kits are 1/20 scale. A few street, racing, and F1 kits are also produced in 1/12 scale including the Ferrari 641/2, McLaren Honda MP4/6, and Williams Renault ...
1 × 4 in (102 mm)/50 deck gun 5 × 21 inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes USS S-50 (SS-161) was a fourth-group ( S-48 ) S -class submarine of the United States Navy .
The first boat in name sequence, USS S-1 (SS-105), was commissioned in 1920 and the last numerically, USS S-51 (SS-162), in 1922. Severe production difficulties encountered by one of the contractors threw the production sequence into disarray and the last of the class actually commissioned was USS S-47 (SS-158) in September, 1925.
Stingray then fired four more torpedoes at the damaged cargo ship that quickly sent Ikushima Maru to the bottom. On the afternoon of 8 April, while patrolling north of the Marianas, Stingray bounced off a large submerged object at a depth of 52 feet (16 m), lifting the submarine three or four feet (0.91 or 1.22 m). Inasmuch as the submarine was ...
Model Products Corporation, usually known by its acronym, MPC, is an American brand and former manufacturing company of plastic scale model kits and pre-assembled promotional models of cars that were popular in the 1960s and 1970s. MPC's main competition was model kits made by AMT, Jo-Han, Revell, and Monogram.
Frog was a well-known British brand of flying model aircraft and scale model construction kits from the 1930s to the 1970s. The company's first model, an Interceptor Mk. 4, was launched in 1932, followed in 1936 by a range of 1:72 scale model aircraft kits made from cellulose acetate, which were the world's first.