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RAF Training Command - Keith Wilson - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

RAF Coastal Command - Keith Wilson - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

RAF Coastal Command - Keith Wilson - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

RAF Coastal Command was founded in 1936 when the Royal Air Force restructured into Fighter, Bomber and Coastal Commands. During the preceding inter-war years, maritime aviation had been seriously neglected due to the disagreements between the Royal Navy and the RAF over the ownership, roles and investment in maritime air power. Consequently, the new Command quickly became known as the ‘Cinderella Service’.However, the Command played a key role in the Allied Victory during the Second World War, particularly during the Battle of the Atlantic. From a modest beginning, the Command blossomed into a powerful anti-submarine force when protecting Allied convoys from the German submarine force, while also protecting that shipping from attacks by the Luftwaffe.Equipped with legendary aircraft such as the Sunderland, Wellington, Catalina and Liberator, along with advances in radar technology such as the new Mark III ASV (Air-to-surface vessel), it was able to locate, attack and destroy an increasing number of U-boats that had fast become the scourge of the convoys.By the end of the Second World War, Coastal Command had flown more than a million flying hours, completed 240,000 operations and destroyed 212 U-boats – but suffered an ever higher loss rate than Bomber Command with 2,060 aircraft lost, along with the lives of 5,866 personnel.Post-war, Coastal Command saw a significant rundown but still made a contribution to the Berlin Airlift. When equipped with the new Shackleton aircraft, their activities shifted to anti-submarine patrols against the Soviet Navy and other fleets of the Warsaw Pact, particularly in the Atlantic.In 1969, Coastal Command was absorbed into the newly formed Strike Command.Illustrated with images from the Air Historical Branch – many of which have never previously been published.

DKK 168.00
1

PACAF and Alaskan Air Command in the 1980s - Adrian Symonds - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Bomber Command - Gordon A. A. Wilson - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Bomber Command - Gordon A. A. Wilson - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Bomber Command is a richly illustrated account of the Royal Air Force organisation from its inception prior to the Second World War in 1936 to its final years during the Cold War. The book covers the reasons for Bomber Command and the personnel that guided its formation and the philosophy and politics of the change from strategic bombing to area bombing, and the ensuing controversy. The Bomber Command organisation and how it functioned is traced, from Headquarters down to the various Groups and the many Squadrons. Famous and specialised Squadrons and the honours awarded to them are explored. Gordon Wilson does not neglect the social impact of this huge organisation: a bomber base had a large impact on the local economy and many lasting war-time bonds were established.The operational aircraft that spearheaded the might of Bomber Command and brought the bombs to the enemy’s shores included famous machines such as the Avro Lancaster, Handley Page Halifax and the unique fighter-bomber, the de Havilland Mosquito. The author analyses their construction and performance. Major target raids and the aircraft and Squadrons taking part are described. Some raids were ill conceived, others were brilliant in their execution.The transition to the Cold War and nuclear deterrence naturally confronted Bomber Command with an entirely rewritten role and saw the introduction of a new generation of V-Force jet bombers.Complemented with a range of images of memorials, famous personnel, stations, aircraft, aircraft engines, and manufacturer’s factories, Bomber Command is a fitting tribute to ‘The Many’.

DKK 190.00
1

AFRES, AFSC, ATC and Other USAF Commands in the 1980s - Adrian Symonds - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

MAC in the 1980s - Adrian Symonds - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Forgotten General - Colonel Dennis Vincent - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Forgotten General - Colonel Dennis Vincent - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

General Sir Alan Cunningham was one of the most celebrated British generals in 1941, but virtually unknown by the end of the Second World War. His fame came from his dynamic leadership of the small East African Army that defeated the Italians. His renown was such that he was selected to form and command the British Army’s newest and most technically advanced formation, the 8th Army, the only British army fighting the Germans in 1941. He was given eight weeks to organise and train his new command. The ensuing battle started exceptionally well, but Cunningham found that he had lost the initiative and just nine days into the campaign he was removed from command by General Auchinleck. His removal was controversial both at the time and today, with an official narrative of mental breakdown; but the author’s research proves this not to be the case.Churchill took against Cunningham and he spent nearly nine months unemployed before he was given a series of UK-based roles until the end of the War. As soon as Churchill lost power, Cunningham was offered the prestigious and incredibly challenging job of High Commissioner in Palestine and for the next three years successfully managed the British withdrawal. This is a fascinating story of military success and political jealousy; perhaps unsurprisingly, the great Alan Brooke and astute Field Marshal Smuts were supporters; Monty was not.The foreword has kindly been provided by Professor Sir John Cunningham, Dr Jane Cunningham and Admiral Sir Jock Slater.

DKK 219.00
1

Wiltshire at War Through Time - Henry Buckton - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

US Naval Aviation in the 1980s: Marine Corps, Naval Training, Test and Reserve Air Stations - Adrian Symonds - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Fighter Boy - Barry Sutton - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Shepherds' Huts & Living Vans - David Morris - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Welsh Military Airfields Through Time - Alan Phillips - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Classic Trucks - Roy Dodsworth - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

SAC in the 1980s - Adrian Symonds - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Agricola - Simon Turney - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Mental Vaccine for Covid-19 - Dr Raj Persaud - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Spitfire Leader - Richard Bungey - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Dam Busters - Martin W. Bowman - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

MOD Railways - Michael Hitchen - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Air War Through German Eyes - Jonathan Trigg - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Lincoln: A Potted History - Lorna Talbott - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

C-130 Hercules in the RAF - Clive Bennett - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

C-130 Hercules in the RAF - Clive Bennett - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

From its introduction in the mid-1960s, when the first aircraft were delivered, through the various humanitarian missions, the Falkland Islands conflict and operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, right up to the introduction of the J version, the Lockheed C-130 Hercules continues to give outstanding service with the RAF and with an expected retirement date of 2030, this would total a service career lasting for a staggering sixty-four years of continuous operations.Designed with an internal hold the same size and dimensions as the American railroad boxcar, the Lockheed C-130 Hercules could carry a wide variety of cargo over distances of up to 2,950 miles. It offered a great improvement over the eclectic mix of its predecessors, the Blackburn Beverley, Handley Page Hastings and Armstrong Whitworth Argosy, all of which continued to provide support, albeit in a secondary role, within RAF Transport Command once the Hercules was introduced to service. This gave an advanced leap in transport capabilities that the RAF had never had at its disposal until the Hercules joined the active inventory.This book tells the full story of one of the most important aircraft in RAF service over the last fifty years. A workhorse that is also astonishingly adaptable for a range of specialised operations, the Hercules is capable of carrying troops as well as vehicles, moving men from one location to another in peacetime training or inserting special forces teams on clandestine operations in time of war.

DKK 161.00
1

Dieppe - Henry Buckton - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Dieppe - Henry Buckton - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Allied assault on the German-occupied port of Dieppe in France, code-named Operation Jubilee, took place on 19 August 1942. It was a battle that lasted for less than ten hours but it has gone down in history as a military disaster, often spoken of in the same manner as the Charge of the Light Brigade and Gallipoli. The German defences had been underestimated. The numbers killed, wounded and taken prisoner at Dieppe were shockingly high and none of the main objectives were realised. The Third Reich considered the raid as a military joke and it provided a textbook of ‘what not to do’ in future amphibious operations.Dieppe was the largest tri-service operation ever mounted up until that point, and even if the planning for the operation was woefully inadequate, it showed that the three services could coordinate their movements under one command. Many believe that Dieppe should not be looked upon as an isolated incident because then its purpose is totally obscured by its terrible cost. Put into context, it was one in a series of raids between Dunkirk and D-Day designed to test the defences of Hitler’s Atlantic Wall, the most famous and successful being the attack on St Nazaire, which is still considered to be the greatest Commando raid of all time.Author Henry Buckton has searched the voluminous records of interviews with Canadian Dieppe veterans collected by Historica Canada to shed new light on this terrible – but perhaps necessary – failure.

DKK 190.00
1

Secret Arundel - Eddy Greenfield - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

DKK 161.00
1

Bristol Blenheim - Andrew Bird - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Bristol Blenheim - Andrew Bird - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Developed in the late 1930s, the Bristol Blenheim was the first RAF aircraft to carry out a reconnaissance over occupied Europe and the first to carry out a bombing raid. This book tells the story of this important aircraft which, although it often missed the limelight, performed valuable roles as bomber, reconnaissance aircraft and night fighter throughout the war.The first Mk I Blenheims entered service with No.114 Squadron in March 1937 and 1,552 were built before the Mk IV came into production, with an extended nose for reconnaissance. Most of the Blenheim squadrons were equipped with the Mk IV by September 1939. Although it outperformed the biplanes of the 1930s, the Blenheim was soon overtaken by single-engine fighters and its role was changed accordingly.In this fascinating and well-researched book, the author shows how the Blenheim adapted to various roles in different theatres of war. Apart from its reconnaissance role, it was also a pioneering night-fighter, taking advantage of the dark to reduce its vulnerability, and it also served as a long-range maritime patrol aircraft with Coastal Command. The Mk IF (Fighter) version was also developed with a gun pack of four .303 machine guns over the bomb bay. Some of these aircraft took part in the Battle of France, Dunkirk and the Battle of Britain. Blenheim operations were then largely moved to North Africa and the Middle East and then the Far East.Written by an authority on RAF aircraft, this book provides new insights into this adaptable and dependable aircraft.

DKK 161.00
1