Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The plane was a Beechcraft Model 200 Super King Air (registered Z3-BAB) operated as a transport aircraft of the Government of the Republic of Macedonia. [106] October 24, 2004: A Model 200 Super King Air crashed into mountainous terrain during a missed approach in Virginia.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 20:16, 26 September 2013: 1,024 × 718 (268 KB): Fæ: Crop bottom 12 pixels to remove watermark (1024x718) 18:49, 26 September 2013
English: Norlandair Beechcraft Super King Air B200 (TF-NLB), at Nuuk Airport (Mittarfeqarfiit), Greenland on September 20, 2017. Date 20 September 2017, 09:05:23
A Model B100 King Air with Garrett engines Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force TC-90. The Model 100 is a stretched derivative of the Model 90 featuring five cabin windows instead of the Model 90's three; MTOW increased by 1,300 lb (590 kg) over the 90, to 10,600 lb (4,810 kg).
The flight path taken by the plane. The King Air took off from Concord, North Carolina, at 12 pm EST, carrying eight passengers and two flight crew.Among them were several key Hendrick Motorsports staff, including team president John Hendrick and his twin daughters, Kimberly and Jennifer Hendrick; Ricky Hendrick, son of Rick Hendrick; general manager Jeff Turner; and chief engine builder Randy ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The Oklahoma State University Cowboys basketball team plane crash occurred on January 27, 2001, at 19:37 EST, when a Beechcraft Super King Air 200, registration N81PF, carrying two players on the Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team along with six Oklahoma State broadcasters and members of the Oklahoma State coaching staff, crashed in a field 40 miles (64 km) east of Denver, [1] near ...
The TC-12B Huron was a twin-engine, pressurized version of the Beechcraft Super King Air 200. Twenty-five served with the U.S. Navy with Training Squadron 35 (VT-35), the Navy's only TC-12B Huron squadron based at Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, Texas, home of the Training Air Wing 4 (TAW-4).