(64 km). Kettering's design, formally called the Kettering Aerial Torpedo but later known as the Kettering Bug, was built by the Dayton-Wright Airplane Company...
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Charles Franklin Kettering (August 29, 1876 – November 25, 1958) sometimes known as Charles Fredrick Kettering was an American inventor, engineer, businessman...
57 KB (2,979 words) - 02:03, 20 January 2025
Aubriot Gabet Land torpedo (Cable guided explosive machine) Dayton-Wright-Kettering Bug (Remote controlled explosive plane) Hewitt-Sperry Automatic (Remote...
42 KB (3,321 words) - 18:43, 27 January 2025
The US Army also tried to develop a flying bomb in World War I, the Kettering Bug, but the war ended before the program could mature. The functioning...
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to build an "aerial torpedo", resulting in the Kettering Bug which first flew in 1918. While the Bug's revolutionary technology was successful, it was...
50 KB (6,680 words) - 05:52, 18 September 2024
These developments also inspired the construction of the Kettering Bug by Charles Kettering from Dayton, Ohio and the Hewitt-Sperry Automatic Airplane...
154 KB (14,371 words) - 11:11, 24 January 2025
of the V-1 Fritz X Henschel Hs 293 Hewitt-Sperry Automatic Airplane Kettering "Bug" Aerial Torpedo List of German guided weapons of World War II List of...
82 KB (10,606 words) - 08:56, 18 January 2025
reproduction Fokker D.VII – reproduction Halberstadt CL.IV Kellett K-2 Kettering Bug (Aerial Torpedo) Martin MB-2 – reproduction Martin Model 139WAA – export...
104 KB (7,846 words) - 04:15, 14 December 2024
the United States Army developed a similar flying bomb called the Kettering Bug. Germany had also flown trials with remote-controlled aerial gliders...
52 KB (4,975 words) - 05:50, 27 January 2025
VIII bomber as a carrier craft, but the Armistice stopped the project. Kettering Bug Notes Branfill-Cook 2014, p. 133. Sollinger 2010, p. 1. Robinson 1979...
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