News

The RAF Centre of Aerospace Medicine in Henlow, Bedfordshire, lifted the treats to 8,000ft inside an altitude chamber normally used in the training of new jet pilots.
Royal Air Force pilots could be able to enjoy a Tunnock’s tea cake at 30,000ft after a 60-year myth they explode was busted.
The Royal Air Force has lifted a ‘60-year ban’ on a popular treat after tests found it won’t explode in cockpit. Tunnock’s tea cakes have been cleared to be taken on board RAF planes after a ...
The Royal Air Force has lifted a ‘60-year ban ... The snack was put inside an altitude chamber and lifted to 8,000ft, before being rapidly decompressed to 25,000ft to see if they would ...
IdeaForge, Zen Technologies Limited, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited, and other Indian industries participated in the Mini ...
It was probably used only in early testing, since its density altitude maxes out at 60,000 ... (warhead-equipped hypersonic gliders), to the Air Force with this 20-inch-long stereo lithograph ...
Discover the truth behind the world's strangest architectural mysteries, from the underground city of Derinkuyu and the ...
The panel acknowledges that the pilots were given poor information on the altitude of the cloud cover ... Eventually he was accepted to the Air Force training school at Orenburg in southern ...
I know everybody talks about different milestones that force you to think about ... I've seen people sleep in hyperbaric chambers. I've seen people train in high-altitude rooms.