Identify by airplane characteristics

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Below check the specific characteristics of the aircraft you are looking for. You can select multiple items for each characteristic. The results will be filtered automatically. 

Fokker S.12

The Fokker S.12 is basically an S.11 with a nose gear instead of a tail gear. The typical trailing link main gear close to the wing leading edge remains, as does the multi-framed canopy.

Fokker S.14 Machtrainer

Fokker's first and only jet fighter aircraft was this trainer with a MiG-type air intake in the nose. Also typical are the side-by-side cockpit with many frames in the canopy, and wings with dihedral on the outer parts.

Folland Gnat

The Folland Gnat was once the Royal Air Force's primary jet trainer. It is a small aircraft with nearly rectangular air intakes and as specialty the rearward retracting main gear. All gears have the door attached to the gear leg, perpendicular to the air flow.

Fouga CM170 Magister & CM175 Zephyr

The butterfly or V-tail makes this primary jet trainer very easy to recognise. Apart from this the aircraft has a remarkably short landing gear and long engine nacelles in the wing roots, against the fuselage.

Found FBA-2

This Canadian bushplane does not have many rounded sides. It can be fitted with a nose gear, tail gear or floats (as shown here). Most typical aspects are the outer wings that taper to the tip, but only the trailing edge curves inward; the leading edge is straight. Many but not all versions have these characteristic P-shaped cabin windows, with good visibility at the feet.  

Developed in Japan this twin was built in production by Rockwell as the Commander 700. It is a low wing aircraft with piston engines mounted in the wing. The nose is relatively long, while the cabin is short. Look for the trapezium shaped cabin windows!

Fuji KM-2 & LM-1/2

In essence this is a Beech T-34 Mentor with a wider fuselage, allowing side-by-side seating, and a different canopy. The tail, nose, wings and gear are typically of the Beechcraft.

Fuji T-1

Japan's first jet aircraft was this trainer. It resembles a stretched North American F-86 with a long canopy with a single frame near the front. The air intake in the nose is wider than it is high.

GAF Nomad

The Australian Nomad has very big cockpit windows compared to its size. Additionally, the twin-wheel main landing gear retracts in pods next to the fuselage, where the wing struts are attached to the fuselage. The vertical stabiliser has a low sweep dorsal fin and a forward swept trailing edge.

Gee Bee

The big radial piston engine of the Gee Bee racer occupies almost the whole fuselage. Additionally, it has hardly a vertical stabiliser. The canopy is very aft, (nearly) against the vertical fin. The wings are braced above and below by cables.