This is a list of aircraft in alphabetical order beginning with 'Sh'.
Sh
edit(Shaanxi Baojii Special Vehicles - China)
- Shaanxi Y-8
- Shaanxi Y-9
- Shaanxi KJ-500
- Shaanxi Y-8W
- Shaanxi Y-8J AEW
- Shaanxi Y-8 AWACS
- Shaanxi ZDK-03 AEW&C
(Irish Aircraft Co, Sandusky, Ohio, United States)
(China)
(James Shannon & Ben E Buente, Evansville, Illinois, United States)
(Shark.Aero s.r.o.)
(George E and Loran Sharp, Newhall, California, United States)
Sharp
edit(Jon Sharp)
(Graydn L. Sharpe)
(Soviet Union)
()
(Victor Simonet et al.)
(Wilfred J Sheehan, S Walpole, Maryland, United States)
(Thomas Shelton (aircraft constructor))
(Shenyang Aircraft Corporation)
- Feilong-1[3][4]
- Shen Hang-1 Harbin Aviation Polytechnic School[3][4]
- Hong Zhuan-503 Red Special 红专-503
- Shenyang BA-5
- Shenyang X-9 Jian Fan
- Shenyang HU-1 Seagull
- Shenyang HU-2 Petrel
- Shenyang Type56
- Shenyang J-2 (Soviet production MiG-15bis aircraft)
- Shenyang J-5
- Shenyang J-6
- Shenyang J-8
- Shenyang J-8II
- Shenyang J-10 (1st use – 1970's project)
- Shenyang J-11
- Shenyang J-13
- Shenyang J-15
- Shenyang J-16
- Shenyang J-21
- Shenyang JJ-1
- Shenyang JJ-2 (Chinese built MiG-15UTI aircraft)
- Shenyang JJ-5
- Dongfeng-101
- Shenyang F60
(China)
(China)
- HU-1
(Fred J Shepard & Thomas C Krum, Beaverton OR.)
(F R Shepherd, Riverbank, California, United States)
(Boris Nikolayevich Sheremetyev)
(Sherpa Aircraft Co Inc, Aloha, Oregon, United States. Sherpa Worldwide Inc & Sherpa International Inc.)
- Sherpa Aircraft Sherpa
- Sherpa Aircraft Sherpa 8[1]
- Sherpa Aircraft Sherpa 200[1]
- Sherpa Aircraft Sherpa 300[1]
- Sherpa Aircraft Sherpa 400[1]
- Sherpa Aircraft Sherpa 411[1]
- Sherpa Aircraft Sherpa 500[1]
(Kiyotake Shigeno)
(Shijiazhuang Aircraft Industry Co.)
- Shijiazhuang Y-5
- Shijiazhuang LE-500 Little Eagle[6]
- Shijiazhuang LE-800[6]
- Shijiazhuang HO300 Seagull[6]
- Shijiazhuang Qingting 5[7]
- Shijiazhuang Qingting 5A[7]
- Shijiazhuang Qingting 5B[7]
- Shijiazhuang Qingting 6[7]
(Japan)
- Shin Meiwa UF-XS technology demonstrator
- Shin Meiwa KJT-1
- Shin Meiwa Tawron
- Shin Meiwa PS-1
- Shin Meiwa US-1
- ShinMaywa US-2
((Clifford) Shinn Engr Co, Santa Ana, California)
(Shirato Hikoki Kenkyusho – Shirato Aeroplane Research Studio)
- Shirato Asahi-go[5]
- Shirato Anzani (Ground Taxi-ing) Trainer[5]
- Shirato Iwao-go
- Shirato Takeru-go (aka Tamura Tractor or Ichimori Tractor)[5]
- Shirato Kauru-go[5]
- Shirato 16[5]
- Shirato 20[5]
- Shirato 25 Kuma-go[5]
- Shirato 26[5]
- Shirato 28[5]
- Shirato 31[5]
- Shirato 32[5]
- Shirato 37[5]
- Shirato 38[5]
- Shirato 40[5]
(Roy L Shirlen, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States)
(Fred P. Shneider, 1020 E 178 St, New York, United States)
(William C Shober, Brookeville, Maryland. c.1973: Shober Aircraft Enterprises, Gaithersburg, Maryland, United States)
(Boyd J Shores, Pasadena, California, United States)
(United Kingdom)
- Short Admiralty Type 74
- Short Admiralty Type 81
- Short Admiralty Type 42
- Short S.81 (1913)
- Short Type 135 (1914)
- Short Type 136 (1914)
- Short Admiralty Type 166
- Short Admiralty Type 184
- Short Type 310
- Short Type 320
- Short Admiralty Type 827
- Short Admiralty Type 830
- Short Biplane No. 1 (1909)
- Short Biplane No. 2 (1909)
- Short Biplane No. 3 (1910)
- Short Bomber
- Short Folder (1913 ff, generic name applied to several types)
- Short Sporting Type (1919)
- Short Tandem Twin
- Short Triple Tractor (S.47)
- Short N.1B Shirl
- Short N.2A Scout
- Short N.2B
- Short N.3 Cromarty
- Short S.27 (construction number)
- Short Improved S.27 (construction number)
- Short S.34 (construction number) ( Dual-control Improved S.27)
- Short S.36 Tractor Biplane (construction number)
- Short S.34 T1 (construction number)
- Short S.38 (1911) (construction number of an Improved S.27, later rebuilt to become new type prototype)
- Short S.39 Triple Twin (construction number)
- Short S.41 Tractor Biplane (construction number)
- Short S.42 monoplane
- Short S.45 T5 (construction number)
- Short S.46 (construction number)
- Short S.47 T4 (construction number)
- Short S.53 Admiralty Type 42 (construction number)
- Short S.54 (construction number)
- Short S.57 (1912) (construction number)
- Short S.60 (construction number)
- Short S.63 Folder Seaplane (construction number)
- Short S.69 (construction number)
- Short S.80 (construction number)
- Short S.81 Gunbus Seaplane (construction number)
- Short S.82 (construction number)
- Short S.87 Type 135 Seaplane (construction number)
- Short S.135 (construction number)
- Short S.301 (140 hp Salmson) Seaplane (construction number)
- Short S.1 Cockle
- Short S.2 (Metal hull for F.5)
- Short S.3 Springbok I 19 April 1923
- Short S.3a Springbok II 25 March 1925
- Short S.3b Chamois
- Short S.4 Satellite
- Short S.5 Singapore I
- Short S.6 Sturgeon
- Short S.7 Mussel
- Short S.8 Calcutta
- Short S.8/8 Rangoon
- Short S.10 Gurnard
- Short S.11 Valetta
- Short S.14 Sarafand
- Short-Kawanishi S.15 KF1
- Short S.16 Scion/Scion II
- Short L.17 Scylla
- Short S.17 Kent
- Short S.18 "Knuckleduster" (also known as Short R.24/31)
- Short S.19 Singapore III
- Short S.20 "Mercury"
- Short S.21 "Maia"
- Short S.22 Scion Senior
- Short Mayo Composite
- Short S.23 Empire C-Class
- Short S.25 Sandringham
- Short S.25 Sunderland
- Short S.26 G-Class
- Short S.29 Stirling
- Short S.30 Empire C-Class
- Short S.31 – Half-scale Stirling
- Short S.32
- Short S.33 Empire C-Class
- Short S.35 Shetland Specification R.14/40
- Short S.36
- Short S.41
- Short S.45 Seaford
- Short S.45 Solent
- Short S.312 Tucano
- Short SA.1 Sturgeon
- Short SA.4 Sperrin
- Short SA.6 Sealand
- Short SB.1
- Short SB.2 Sealand II
- Short SB.3
- Short SB.4 Sherpa
- Short SB.5
- Short SB.6 Seamew
- Short SB.7 Sealand III
- Short SC.1
- Short SC.5 Belfast
- Short SC.7 Skyvan
- Short SD.3-30
- Short 330
- Short 360
- Short C-23 Sherpa
- Short Crusader
- Gnosspelius Gull (1923)
- Short Silver Streak (1920)
- Short Sporting Type
- Short FJX[8]
(Showers-Aero)
(Tod Shriver & (?) Dietz, Mineola, New York, United States)
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "American airplanes: sa – si". Aerofiles.com. 2009-07-04. Retrieved 2011-04-06.
- ^ "Vauville Meeting 1925". Flight. 13 August 1925. pp. 517–524. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
- ^ a b Green, William (1965). The Aircraft of the World (3rd ed.). McDonald & Co. p. 24.
- ^ a b Gordon, Yefim; Dmitry Komissarov (2008). Chinese Aircraft:China's aviation industry since 1951. Manchester: Hikoki Publications. p. 253. ISBN 978-1-902109-04-6.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mikesh, Robert; Shorzoe Abe (1990). Japanese Aircraft 1910–1941. London: Putnam. ISBN 0-85177-840-2.
- ^ a b c "Shijiazhuang Aircraft Industry Limited Company". Retrieved 16 March 2014.
- ^ a b c d John W.R. Taylor, ed. (1988). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1988-89. London: Jane's Information Group. ISBN 0-7106-0867-5.
- ^ "Shorts PD.65".