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The army doesn't have any planes, only helicopters. The Air Force has all the planes. The army does not have fighter planes, but they do have transport planes. The navy has planes as well. All fixed wing aircraft that carry army service members are piloted and owned by the air force. But yes, the navy does have a variety of planes based off of aircraft carriers.
All current missiles are electrically triggered in a sequence to 'spool up' as they release from the aircraft.
P-51 in Europe
The US Air Force has approximately 5,600 aircraft in its inventory, which include a variety of fighter jets, bombers, transport planes, and other aircraft for different missions and roles.
The US Airforce, Navy, Coast Guard, and Marines all combined equal a total of approximately 18,300 aircraft.
Fighters like the P41 Mustang weren't really all that big. About the size of a twin engine Cessna today.
The Tuskegee Airmen. Some of the very best pilots in WWII. They never lost a bomber to enemy fighter planes, (although there was nothing they could about the German antiaircraft guns).
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The length of time to assemble a fighter plane depended on the type of plane, the manufacturing plant and which nation was doing the building. At the beginning of the war, the Brits were turning out 400 fighter planes a month. The US could produce more than that a month but we had more types of fighters and companies. I have included a production graph for you on the web site below. This chart does include all types of planes though. Follow the links and references and you may find fighter plane production figures.