The easiest way is with a bye. So the 5th fighter goes through as if he had won a fight. then one of the other 2 victorious fighters would be given a bye to final to meet the winner of fighter 5 and the other fighter left in it after round 1.
A mini-tournament would be better with 5, with each fighter fighting the other 4 opponents, with a points system of some sort.
it is fossil fighters number 2
The phone number of the Champlin Fighter Museum is: 480-830-4540.
The Russian Air force likely has the most jet fighters in the world
Jet fighters have no interior space to store bombs. Fighter/bombers such as the F105 Thunderchief do, which is why it was the number one bomber over North Vietnam...and suffered the highest loss rates of the war (for the amount of F105s built which was 833, of which nearly 400 were lost in the war). Fighters, such as the F100 Super Sabre, F101 Voodoo, F102 Delta dagger, F104 Starfighter, F8 Crusader, F4 Phantom II, were strictly fighters but were forced into bombing missions also. However, the fighters couldn't carry half the bomb load of the F105 thunderchief...while the "Thud" might carry 24 bombs, the F100 Super Sabre might carry only 4 bombs.
Japanese records were destroyed during WWII. However, it's estimated that Mitsubishi built nearly 12,000 A6M Zero fighters; Kawasaki built nearly 4,000 Type 61 and Type 100's (Tony and Hien fighters).
Yes but it may not be released in the US.
It is vivosaur not vivasaure but it is Tarbo.
All My Life, Everlong
The P51A was the fourth variation of the famous "Mustang" fighter. The "A" variant was the last to employ an Allison engine. Mustangs are still around, and were used as fighters by a number of smaller nations into the 1970s. Today in the US, Mustangs are often raced in airplane races. They are quite fast and agile.
No, the B-29 raids were typically beyond the range of fighter cover. The nearest friendly fighter bases were in Iwo Jima and Okinawa, but they were not often used. B-29s did not typically need escorts in any case, as they often flew figh enough, due to their pressurized fuselage, to be unreachable by Japanese fighters. Even if the fighters DID get there, each bomber was equipped with anywhere between 10 and 12 .50 caliber machine guns and occasionally a 20mm cannon. Multiply that by the number of bombers in a formation, and you will get a rough idea why the Japanese fighters had a lot of trouble attacking daylight bomber formations. The Enola Gay had two escort bombers. They left just before reaching the target. Another bomber flew ahead to report the weather conditions on the 3 selected targets. All targets had cloud cover except Hiroshima.
The phone number of the African American Fire Fighter Museum is: 213-744-1730.
The united states.