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  2. Airborne lifeboat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airborne_lifeboat

    An airborne lifeboat was to be carried by a heavy bomber specially modified to handle the external load of the lifeboat. The airborne lifeboat was intended to be dropped by parachute to land within reach of the survivors of an accident on the ocean, specifically airmen survivors of an emergency water landing. Airborne lifeboats were used during ...

  3. No. 279 Squadron RAF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No._279_Squadron_RAF

    It was originally equipped with Lockheed Hudson fitted, from 1943, to carry Mark I airborne lifeboats. [6] Detachments of the squadron were stationed at several RAF stations in the south-west of England between April 1942 and December 1943 to provide an air-sea rescue capability over the Bay of Biscay and Western Approaches .

  4. Higgins Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgins_Industries

    A Higgins Industries torpedo boat plant in New Orleans, 1942. Higgins Industries was the company owned by Andrew Higgins based in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.. Higgins Industries is most famous for the design and production of the Higgins boat, an amphibious landing craft referred to as LCVP (Landing Craft, Vehicle, Personnel), which was used extensively in the Allied forces' D-Day ...

  5. A-1 lifeboat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A-1_lifeboat

    A Boeing SB-17G, an air-sea rescue aircraft modified to carry the A-1 lifeboat. The A-1 lifeboat was a powered lifeboat that was made to be dropped by fixed-wing aircraft into water to aid in air-sea rescue operations. The sturdy airborne lifeboat was to be carried by a heavy bomber specially

  6. RNLB Thomas McCunn (ON 759) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNLB_Thomas_McCunn_(ON_759)

    RNLB Thomas McCunn (ON 759) is a 45ft 6in Watson-class [1] lifeboat stationed at Longhope in Orkney, Scotland, [2] from January 1933 until April 1962. During which time she was launched on service 101 times and saved 308 lives. [1]

  7. A-3 lifeboat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A-3_lifeboat

    The airborne lifeboat was dropped from the SB-29 on a single 100-foot (30 m) parachute. Like previous airborne lifeboat designs, it was self-righting. The boat had a boarding ladder, and carried food and water for the rescued people. In March 1951, Time magazine reported that the USAF was testing a radio controlled steering device for the A-3 ...

  8. Dumbo (air-sea rescue) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumbo_(air-sea_rescue)

    RAF Coastal Command Vickers Warwick ASR (air-sea rescue) aircraft with a droppable airborne lifeboat under the fuselage. The first air-dropped lifeboat was British, a 32-foot (10 m) wooden canoe-shaped model designed in 1943 by Uffa Fox to be dropped by Avro Lancaster heavy bombers for the rescue of aircrew downed in the Channel. [5]

  9. Air-sea rescue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air-sea_rescue

    A Royal Navy rescue helicopter in action above a boat An Auckland Rescue Helicopter in action. Air-sea rescue (ASR or A/SR, also known as sea-air rescue), [1] and aeronautical and maritime search and rescue (AMSAR) by the ICAO and IMO, [2] is the coordinated search and rescue (SAR) of the survivors of emergency water landings as well as people who have survived the loss of their seagoing vessel.