Greetings from Florida, much longer then it is wide.
I note that the Soviets halted heavy bomber development in 1936. Though the Germans had already made the decision to cancel their heavy programs (Do-19;Ju-89) I'm wondering if Goering was playing suite in his April 29, 1937 edict to cancel the programs. If Russia was not playing the heavy card, why follow? It's one of the decisions that eventually cost Germany the war.
mike1204, e-mail, 30.06.2009 16:44
Max, sorry mate, but Hitler's Wehrmacht was making a bloody niusance of itself in the Ukraine in 1941, and Romania fought with the Axis powers, mostly using Luftwaffe aircraft, so was also a legitimate target in 1941, and was to remain so until Soviet troops entered Berlin in 1945.
Max, 27.04.2009 01:40
There was no any targets in Ukraine. Ukraine was the one of the republics of the USSR from 1923 till 1992.
Roman Boiko, e-mail, 14.12.2008 12:25
Hi David, I'm afraid that no TB-3s exist today. They were all scrapped in the 1950s. However at least one wreck remains somewhere in the arctic. It would certainly be a dream to fly one of these someday, and it's a pity that none still exist.
David Neale, e-mail, 20.07.2007 15:36
Greetings from England.
Is there a surviving TB-3 aircraft anywhere in the world? I would travel anywhere to see an example of this amazing, wonderful machine ....
Kind regards,
David Neale
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