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A Bleriot Sea-plane

A Bleriot Sea-plane.jpg A Flying Boat - side viewThumbnailsAn Avro Sea-PlaneA Flying Boat - side viewThumbnailsAn Avro Sea-PlaneA Flying Boat - side viewThumbnailsAn Avro Sea-PlaneA Flying Boat - side viewThumbnailsAn Avro Sea-PlaneA Flying Boat - side viewThumbnailsAn Avro Sea-PlaneA Flying Boat - side viewThumbnailsAn Avro Sea-Plane
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England, in the building and handling of sea-planes has come well to the fore, and our machines are more advanced than those of other countries. The Admiralty has recognised that, acting as a coastal scout in time of war, such craft would be of the utmost value; thus we find air-stations dotted round our seaboard, from which machines may fly in a regular patrol. By the employment of hundreds of craft, operating upon a well-ordered plan, it will be possible in the future to girdle our shores completely; and such machines would not only spy out the approach of an enemy’s fleet, but give battle to hostile aeroplanes or airships which might seek to pass inland. The type of machine we have just described was a biplane, but there are monoplane sea-craft, and a Bleriot fitted for alighting upon the water is shown.

Author
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Aeroplane, by Claude Grahame-White and Harry Harper
Published 1914
Dimensions
1200*452
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