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The following list contains the aircraft used by the Royal Danish Air Force or its predecessors, the Danish Army Air Corps and Royal Danish Naval Aviation. During the Nazi occupation from 1940 to 1945, Danish military aviation was prohibited. The aircraft currently in use are highlighted in blue.
An RDAF Supermarine Spitfire on display at the Stauning Aircraft Museum Danish Air Force AW101 hoisting from water. The Royal Danish Air Force (RDAF) was formed as a military service independent from the army and navy in 1950 from the merger of the Danish Army Air Corps (Danish: Hærens Flyvertropper) founded on 2 July 1912 [8] and the Danish Naval Air Service (Danish: Marinens Flyvevæsen ...
A flight of Dutch Fokker D.XXI Fighters. The Fokker D.XXI was Denmark's most advanced fighter when the German invasion occurred. 23 were available. The main Danish variant of the DXXI was similar to the Bf 109Es used by Germany at the time. Bristol Bulldog [1] [2] Gloster Gauntlet [3] Fokker D.XXI [4]
The program was originally an agreement between Denmark and Norway to replace their uniforms in 2014 [163] with Sweden joining in 2016. [164] Source on when Finland joined is lacking Was confirmed in 2024 that the uniform would be introduced in Blue for the Royal Danish Navy [ 165 ]
The following is a list of Denmark military equipment of World War II which includes artillery, vehicles and vessels. World War II was a global war that was under way by 1939 and ended in 1945. Weapons
List of military aircraft of Denmark; R. Ranks and insignia of Royal Danish Air Force; V. Værløse Air Base This page was last edited on 24 October 2022, at 18 ...
Military aircraft by nationality of original manufacturer International joint ventures Algeria • Argentina • Australia • Austria • Austria and Austria-Hungary • Belgium • Brazil • Bulgaria • Canada • Chile • China • Colombia • Cyprus • Czech Republic and Czechoslovakia • Denmark • Egypt • Estonia • Finland • France • Georgia (country) • East Germany ...
One aircraft was leased for seven months from British Eagle, as SAS was expanding its network but had not received a sufficient number of DC-9s. It was mostly used on the Copenhagen–Zürich route and irregularly domestically in Denmark. SAS operated a second aircraft, without SAS livery, when the main aircraft was for maintenance in England. [47]