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swingsby
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The answer SWINGSBY has 2 possible clue(s) in existing crosswords.
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The word SWINGSBY is NOT valid in any word game. (Sorry, you cannot play SWINGSBY in Scrabble, Words With Friends etc)
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Definitions of swingsby in various dictionaries:
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Possible Crossword Clues |
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Includes on one's route |
Visits along the way |
Last Seen in these Crosswords & Puzzles |
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Jun 5 2010 New York Times |
Jan 5 2002 New York Times |
Swingsby might refer to |
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The Slingsby T67 Firefly, originally produced as the Fournier RF-6, is a two-seat aerobatic training aircraft, built by Slingsby Aviation in Kirkbymoorside, Yorkshire, England. It has been successfully used by the UK armed forces, where the Royal Air Force used 22 Slingsby T67M260s as their basic trainer between 1995 and 2010, with over 100,000 flight hours flown out of RAF Barkston Heath (Army, Royal Navy and Royal Marines students, who lived on camp at RAF Cranwell) and also RAF Church Fenton (RAF and foreign students were accommodated at RAF Linton on Ouse, and bussed to and from the airfield daily). The Slingsby has also been used by the Royal Hong Kong Auxiliary Air Force, the Royal Jordanian Air Force (still currently used), and other military training schools around the world for many years. Also, in December 2012, the National Flying Laboratory Centre at Cranfield University [1] in the UK acquired a T67M260 to supplement its Scottish Aviation Bulldog aerobatic trainer for MSc student flight experience and training. * The Slingsby is a very competent basic trainer and is still operated by many private individuals for standard-level aerobatics training. It was flown by HRH Prince Harry as a basic trainer during his Army Air Corps flying training course, based at RAF Barkston Heath, including his first solo flight in Slingsby T67M260 registration G-BWXG in 2009. Tom Cassells [2] a British Aerobatic Champion regularly flies his Slingsby Firefly. However, in the mid-1990s, the aircraft became controversial in the United States after three fatal accidents during US Air Force training operations, although an Air Force investigation eventually attributed the accidents primarily to pilot error. |