US military aircraft crashes in Iraq
Digest more
An aging US Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft crashed in western Iraq during Operation Epic Fury. CENTCOM reported that two aircraft were involved in the incident
(NYSE:JOBY), a company developing electric air taxis for commercial passenger service, today announced it has begun flight testing its first FAA-conforming aircraft for Type Inspection Authorization (TIA),
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Bell’s new 517 mph-speeding aircraft for DARPA’s SPRINT program passes design review
In military aviation, the runway has always been a tether. It provides the distance
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A KC-135 refueling aircraft "went down" in Iraq, the US military announced Friday evening. A second unidentified aircraft was involved but landed safely. The status of the refueling ...
The federal government has selected eight proposals to test electric aircraft across 26 states.
The aircraft could include taxi and emergency medical response services, regional transportation, and autonomous flights.
The contract between Russia and Iran for the supply of Yak-130 training aircraft and Su-35 fighter jets will remain in force in 2026. Source: Ukrainian media outlet united24media and documents analysed by Ekonomichna Pravda Details: Correspondence between various contractors involved in manufacturing certain components for the military aircraft shows that the contract between Rosoboronexport and Iran (referred to in the documents as "foreign customer K10") has been implemented in a planned manner over recent years.
Horizon Aircraft's Cavorite X7 already sported a radical design, even within the wild world of hybrid eVTOLs. That design has now been updated, however, for enhanced aerodynamics, cruising performance, and flight safety. We first heard about Canadian ...
Axios on MSN
Electric aircraft soon to jet in Texas skies
Austin and other Texas cities could soon be on the vanguard of the next era of aviation, with innovative electric aircraft jetting off their runways. What's happening: The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) was selected for one of eight pilot projects nationally,