US Air Force, fighter jet
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Vice President JD Vance flies in a C-32, a custom military version of a commercial jetliner.
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The Federal Aviation Administration said on Wednesday it may slow flight arrivals at Reagan Washington National Airport after a January 29 collision between a helicopter and an American Airlines regi...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNUS Air Force’s F-16 Vipers to get ‘Venom’ boost for autonomous flying capabilityThe US Air Force has reached a significant milestone in automating the F-16 fighter jet to fly the “Viper” without a pilot. The Fighting Falcon is undergoing AI modifications at Eglin Air Force Base for the “Viper Experimentation and Next-Generation Operations Model-Autonomy Flying Testbed” program (VENOM-AFT).
The largest aircraft in the US Air Force is famed for its, enormous payload capacity, illustrious service legacy and global range.
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The Pentagon has sent at least six B-2 bombers – 30% of the US Air Force’s stealth bomber fleet – to the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, in what analysts have called a message to Iran as tensions once again flare in the Middle East.
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In January, an American Airlines plane and a military helicopter collided near the same airport, killing more than 60 people.
The decision is good news for Boeing's plant in St. Louis, which is scheduled to end production of the F/A-18 Super Hornet in 2027. Boeing lost its last bid to build a fighter jet when its X-32 lost out to Lockheed's X-35 in the Joint Strike Fighter competition in 2001.
ZeroAvia will work with a California-based expert in autonomous flight technology on how to make heavy unmanned aircraft even stealthier
Boeing has secured a contract modification valued at $2.26 billion for the sustainment of the U.S. Air Force’s C-17 Globemaster III military transport aircraft. The Department of Defense said Monday that the modification includes foreign military sales to Australia,
A Delta flight preparing to leave Washington, D.C. and an incoming military jet avoided a possible collision after reportedly coming within 500 feet of each other.
A close call between a Delta Air Lines Airbus A319 taking off from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and a US Air Force T-38 jet, often used by the military for training, sounded alarms in the cockpit of the passenger plane Friday.