FlightGlobal.com
Home
Premium
Archive
Video
Images
Forum
Atlas
Blogs
Jobs
Shop
RSS
Email Newsletters
You are in:
Home
Aviation History
1951
1951 - 2120.PDF
OCTOBER 195 I FLIGHT Foreground of one of the bays houima ir.a;..'..,;,. operations at Canadair Limited, Montreal. Vignettes of M p CAN AD A-Al« - -TCi ^owrSown precious mine-is haveoWen picks and pad" a", equipped witnToday, '" >«rv.ey PJ f°"he air-borne sub-c refined version °\%, orM War ».marine aetccto j»»»rmine nus FOR AIRCRAFT PRODUCTION Covering ™^« M8 » • good-MMd farm ... ,he Canada p[,ms at Mon.real, fleet F 86 Sabre* jet interceptors. From immense hydraulic presses and taper m.nmg machines... through the long assembly flow lines... the finest modern aircraft production machinery fills every acre. During World War II, the Allies flew military aircraft built by Canadair; and today luxurious Canadair-built four-engined airliners touch down at airfields around the world. Within its 40 acres of factories, Canadair is fully equipped to produce any kind of military or civil aircraft from design to final assembly under particularly advantageous manufacturing conditions. marine £<%tm,ne For further information: European Representative, J. H. Davis, Princes House, 190 Piccadilly, London, Wl, England. The discovery of a nug ^ ,.under two hundred tee^ QnWXasbestos in NO^ completlng a mile survey OT i' » *«w instances ot Sbutiln being made th% Car— economy by exploration. onder...asbestos titanium ore . •thousand »o.«a foundland ore J LIMITED, MONTREAL, CANADA 'Made under license from North American Aviation, Int.
Sign up to
Flight Digital Magazine
Flight Print Magazine
Airline Business Magazine
E-newsletters
RSS
Events