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MITSUBISHI Aircraft Manuals PDF

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Mitsubishi MU-2B Aircraft Maintenance & Wiring Diagram Manual
Mitsubishi MU-2B Aircraft Maintenance & Wiring Diagram Manual
Mitsubishi MU-2B Aircraft Maintenance &
Adobe Acrobat Document 9.7 MB
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Mitsubishi MU-2B Aircraft Report
Mitsubishi MU-2B Aircraft Report
Mitsubishi MU-2B Aircraft Report.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Document 2.0 MB

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Mitsubishi Regional Jet MRJ Technical Review
Mitsubishi Regional Jet MRJ Technical Review
Mitsubishi Regional Jet MRJ Technical Re
Adobe Acrobat Document 96.6 KB
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Mitsubishi Ki-67 Hiryu Type 4 Heavy Bomber Guide
Mitsubishi Ki-67 Hiryu Type 4 Heavy Bomber Guide
Mitsubishi Ki-67 Hiryu Type 4 Heavy Bomb
Adobe Acrobat Document 1.6 MB

Mitsubishi T-2 Aircraft
Mitsubishi Aircraft MRJ90

History of Mitsubishi Aircraft

Some MITSUBISHI Aircraft Flight Manuals PDF above the page.

 

Mitsubishi takes over the old again and returns to the aircraft industry.

 

Until the end of WWII, this corporation was Japan's leading manufacturer of aircraft and aircraft engines. Its factories produced, for example, such a masterpiece as the Mitsibishi A6M or Zero fighter in the English version.

 

It was one of the most famous WWII fighters.

 

Defeat in the war drove the corporation out of aircraft production.

 

The reorganized Mitsubishi corporation has focused its activities in heavy industry, metallurgy, shipbuilding and especially the automotive industry, becoming one of the world's leading car manufacturers, whose products do not really need advertising.

 

Mitsubishi is also engaged in military development, which, in general, is not surprising for a corporation with a well-known military background.

Back in 2004, Japan decided to create its own fifth-generation fighter, the development and manufacture of which was undertaken by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.

 

The development of the production of passenger aircraft also helps to strengthen the Japanese potential in the military aircraft industry.

 

First, it allows us to develop our own production of jet engines, partly supported by demand from the civil aircraft industry.

 

Secondly, any civilian passenger aircraft quite easily turns into a military one, for example, into a military transport, into a flying hospital, into an early warning aircraft, and so on.