June 1943 Polish Wellington ground crew RAF Hemswell.
@MJBudzinski via X
seen from China

seen from Switzerland

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Australia

seen from Switzerland

seen from Japan
seen from Switzerland
seen from United States
seen from Switzerland

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Germany
seen from Mexico
seen from Germany
seen from Spain

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Switzerland
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Russia
June 1943 Polish Wellington ground crew RAF Hemswell.
@MJBudzinski via X
B-25
@ron_eisele via X
A Japanese Mitsubishi Ki-21 bomber (Type 97 Army Bomber) over China during a combat mission. The Ki-21 was codenamed "Sally" by the Allies.
@Destroye83 via X
A French Bloch MB.131 bomber and its pilots (not just the crew, as the plane had a crew of four). The aircraft belonged to the GR I/35 air unit. September 3, 1939.
@Destroye83 via X
CAF SoCal PBJ -1J / B-25 on a beautifully sunny day at Mojave Air & Space Port. Thanks to the incredible crew for the tour, it’s nice to see a piece of history!
@maurer8photography via X
Ground personnel load bombs into an SB-2M-103 bomber. 1941–1942.
@Destroye83 via X
Today, June 5, is the day the Italian bomber SM.84 made its first flight.
It was an aircraft developed by Savoia-Marchetti in the late 1930s. Development began as a torpedo bomber variant of the company's bomber SM.79, but in the end, everything except the main wings and main landing gear was newly designed.
However, its performance was mediocre, its maneuverability had actually declined, and its reliability was low as well, with production totaling around 300 aircraft.
@niboshiwaiwai via X
Bombardier moyen Savoia-Marchetti SM.79 Sparviero en version bombardier-torpilleur