Hs 55 Service Manual
Common Replacement Parts for Honda HS55 WA Snow Blower, Frame Serial HS-1000001 to 1099999 If you haven't already, please read our. Please note: As we don't see much snow down here, we don't stock many parts for Honda snow blowers. The only parts we do carry for their snow blowers are those that happen to fit other pieces of Honda equipment as well. Items we don't stock are indicated with approximate shipping delay. We can get other parts for this model.
Max on Jan 10, 2014. Honda HS55 track snow blower. I was seeking information on how to reduce the weight down pressure on the front skid shoes becaust. Jan 13, 2018 - Contact Honda directly and request the HS 55 service manual.
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Hs 293 on display at the in, Germany, with added 'Kopfring' (lit. 'head ring') on the nose for nautical targets Type Place of origin Service history In service 1943- 1944 Used by Wars Production history Manufacturer Produced 1942 -? No. built 1,000 Specifications Weight 1,045 kilograms (2,304 lb) Length 3.82 metres (12.5 ft) Width 3.1 metres (10 ft) Diameter 0.47 metres (1.5 ft) Warhead explosive Warhead weight 295 kilograms (650 lb) Engine 109-507 motor, 5.9 kilonewtons (1,300 lb f) thrust for 10 s; subsequently glided to target.
Military intelligence datasheet on the Henschel Hs 293. On August 25, 1943, an Hs 293 was used in the first successful attack by a guided missile, striking the sloop; however, as the warhead did not detonate, the damage was minimal.
On August 27, the sinking of the British sloop by a squadron of 18 carrying Hs 293s led to anti- patrols in the being temporarily suspended. On November 26, an Hs 293 sank the troop transport killing over 1,000 personnel. Henschel Hs 293B guided bomb on display at the 2013 Australian War Memorial open day. Hs 293A-0, the first production version. Hs 293A-1, main production version. Hs 293A-2, steel construction rather than aluminium.
Hs 293A-v5 A-1 with shortened wings. Hs 293B wire-guided to prevent jamming; although jamming would eventually make the Hs 293 ineffective, it was never put into production.
Hs 293C (production version designated Hs 293A-2) had the detachable warhead of the Hs 294. Hs 293D was -guided, with a large transmitting back to the launch aircraft. Twenty were built and tested, but it was never used operationally as the television equipment was unreliable. Hs 293E, an experimental model to test controls as a replacement to; never put into series production. This modification was put into the final version of the Hs 293A-2 but by then the had no aircraft available for anti-shipping operations and it was never deployed. Hs 293F, a tailless delta-wing variant; never got further than the design phase.
Hs 293H, an experimental variant designed to be launched from one aircraft and controlled from another. Abandoned because allied air superiority had reached the point where it was felt that the second aircraft would be unable to remain in the vicinity of the ship for long enough. Used the Schmidding solid-fuel rocket motor. It was also considered as an anti-aircraft missile. Hs 293-U6, the short wingspan variant, fitted with a solid fuel motor and intended for launching from the jet bomber at 720 km/h (447 mph). The missile did not proceed past the design stage.
Operators. See also. further development of the Hs 293., the pioneering PGM-deployment bomber wing of the Luftwaffe. autonomously radar-guided U.S. Navy glide bomb. armored-casing anti-ship, guidable 'smart bomb' precursor Notes. Christopher, John.
The Race for Hitler's X-Planes (The Mill, Gloucestershire: History Press, 2013), p.134. ^ Christopher, p.134. Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.
Retrieved August 1, 2013. Retrieved August 1, 2013.
Mercury Mark 55 Service Manual
Popular Mechanics, July 1944 - World War Two illustration of Hs 123A-1 and flight path for attacking shipping. Martin J. Bollinger, Warriors and Wizards: Development and Defeat of Radio-Controlled Glide Bombs of the Third Reich, Annapolis: Naval Institute Press(2010). ^ Christopher, p.135. The U-boat hunters: the Royal Canadian Navy and the offensive against Germany's submarines.
University of Toronto Press, p. ^ Bogart, Charles H. 'German Remotely Piloted Bombs' United States Naval Institute Proceedings November 1976 pp.62-68. Blair, Clay Hitler's U-Boat War, The Hunted 1942-1945 Random House (1998) p.405. Zaloga, Steven J. Operation Dragoon 1944: France's other D-Day.
See Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. This indicates that the three Hs 293 missiles targeted at Tillman exploded without damage but that a torpedo exploding in the ship's wake did cause damage. 2012-09-10 at.
Hs55 Service Manual
^ (1970). German Secret Weapons of World War 2. Arms and Armour Press.