The Extremely Secret and Stubby Convair Model 48 Charger
The multi-mission General Dynamics Convair Model 48 Charger was a prototype for a light attack and observation aircraft designed and developed for the Vietnam War as one of its first counter-insurgency aircraft.
The project was undertaken under extreme secrecy. In March of 1964, 30 engineers and production workers at the Convair facilities in San Diego, California, started working in a secluded area. That number would eventually increase to 200.
When the top-secret project was finally unveiled, Convair announced it as a Light Armed Reconnaissance Aircraft, or LARA, to be used by the Marines, Army, and Air Force.
Convair had anticipated the needs of the military early on, but competition from the North American Rockwell OV-10 Bronco became an unrelenting race to the skies.
---
Join Dark Skies as we explore the world of aviation with cinematic short documentaries featuring the biggest and fastest airplanes ever built, top-secret military projects, and classified missions with hidden untold true stories
18 views
43
15
2 weeks ago 00:02:42 1
X2 (5/5) Movie CLIP - This Is the Only Way (2003) HD
2 weeks ago 00:03:56 1
WE PRAY - Coldplay, Elyanna, Little Simz, Burna Boy, TINI (Elyanna Version) (Official)
2 weeks ago 01:25:57 1
Praveen Mohan On Dark Truth Of Indian Temples, Secrets Of Pyramid & More | The Ranveer Show 270
2 weeks ago 00:13:56 1
Milarepa - Mantra by Chogyal Rinpoche
2 weeks ago 00:00:00 1
HOUSE SO HAUNTED NO ONE WILL ENTER ALONE | CORPSE FOUND | REAL PARANORMAL INVESTIGATION
2 weeks ago 00:35:42 1
Journey to the Center of the Earth (It Took 8 Days, I Lost 10kg)
2 weeks ago 00:06:14 1
Withered Land - My Last Autumn (Official Video) [2024]
3 weeks ago 00:58:59 2
BBC: Extreme Pilgrim - Ascetic Christianity
3 weeks ago 00:08:22 1
Father Lazarus shares his wisdom with a British pilgrim
3 weeks ago 01:16:00 3
Simon Hanes: GARGANTUA
3 weeks ago 00:03:02 1
Dragonball Super: Stronger than you vegito (fight animation)
3 weeks ago 00:21:18 1
New Year’s Attacks by Green Beret & Army Veteran: Does U.S. Militarism Abroad Fuel Violence at Home?