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  1. Oct 17, 2020 · A first generation British jet-powered medium bomber, the English Electric Canberra was designed by W. E. W. ‘Teddy’ Petter. It could fly at a higher altitude than any other bomber throughout the 1950’s and set a world’s altitude record of 70,310 ft (21,430 m) in 1957.

  2. The English Electric Canberra is a British first-generation, jet-powered medium bomber. It was developed by English Electric during the mid- to late 1940s in response to a 1944 Air Ministry requirement for a successor to the wartime de Havilland Mosquito fast bomber. Among the performance requirements for the type was an outstanding high ...

  3. Canberra PR9 Final Deployment Feature Report. June 23rd saw the end of the RAF's Photo Reconnaissance Unit's last overseas operational deployment. This occasion marked not just another "End of an era", but the upcoming retirement of the most successful and long lived British military jet.

  4. Jun 20, 2021 · From 1 May to 14 June 1982, Argentine Canberras made 54 sorties; 36 of them bombing missions, of which 22 were at night against ground troops. [114] Two aircraft were lost in combat, the first to a Sea Harrier's AIM-9L Sidewinder air-to-air missile on 1 May 1982. [114]

  5. XH131 was the third aircraft from the PR.9 production line at Belfast and is the oldest surviving example of the type. This aircraft was purchased by the UAS with the assistance of the Heritage Lottery Fund, joining the collection in Northern Ireland during December 2010.

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  6. The Canberra PR9 will be formally retired from RAF service in 2006. The aircraft’s illustrious and extensive career with the RAF will end when the last four Canberra PR9s of 39 (part of 1 Photographic Reconnaissance Unit (PRU)) land at RAF Marham for the final time.

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  8. The Canberra served with the RAF until July 2006 when the last three PR9 aircraft left RAF Marham for their new home at Kemble in Gloucestershire. The Canberra, designed by Teddy Petter in the late 1940s and still being used around the world albeit in very small numbers, and still going strong over sixty years after its first flight.

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