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Spitfire Mk IXB

Introduction |
Specification |
History |
Film Credits & Photos
NOTE:
OFMC DOES NOT OFFER PASSENGER FLIGHTS IN THIS AIRCRAFT
The most
famous military aircraft of all time and one of the most beautiful
ever built, the Spitfire is perhaps chiefly remembered as the symbol
of the Battle of Britain. The Spitfire was developed by
Supermarine’s brilliant chief designer, R.J. Mitchell, and was the
only British type in continuous construction throughout World War
II. The RAF’s first Spitfires were delivered to No 19 Squadron at
Duxford in 1938 and by July 1940, on the eve of the Battle of
Britain, nineteen RAF squadrons were equipped with the new fighter.
During WWII, thanks to constant improvements and modifications, the
Spitfire was never outclassed as a short-ranged piston-engined
interceptor apart from a brief period in 1941-1942, when it first
encountered the Focke-Wulf FW-190. When production finally ceased in
1949, more than 22,000 Spitfires and Seafires (the naval version of
the Spitfire) had been built in some forty different variants.
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