The hexadecimal RGB code of Anti-Flash White color is #F2F3F4. This code is composed of a hexadecimal F2 red (242/256), a F3 green (243/256) and a F4 blue component (244/256). The decimal RGB color code is rgb(242,243,244).
Anti-flash white Anti-flashwhite is a white colour commonly seen on British, Soviet, and U.S. nuclear bombers. The purpose of the colour is to reflect some of the thermal
Royal Air Force roundels red stripe forward. Aircraft painted anti-flashwhite in the nuclear strike role had a pale pink and blue flash, the same shades as the roundels, to reflect
Avro Vulcan Conversion Unit (OCU), the first in July 1956. Later aircraft, painted in anti-flashwhite and powered by the Olympus 102 with 12,000 lbf (53 kN) thrust, began
List of colors by shade shade, and the result of the absence or complete absorption of light. Like white and gray, it is an achromatic color, literally a color without hue. Blue
TACAMO A Boeing E-6B Mercury airborne, painted anti-flashwhite
Tupolev Tu-95 The footage shows the specially adapted Tu-95V plane – painted with anti-flashwhite on its ventral surfaces – taking off carrying the bomb, in-flight scenes
Anti-Venom who happens to be Flash Thompson. Flash decides to use the symbiote for good and becomes "Agent Venom". Anyone possessed by the Anti-Venom symbiote possesses
Bomber generally finished in bare metal or anti-flashwhite to minimize absorption of thermal radiation from the flash of a nuclear explosion. The need to drop
Tupolev Tu-160 reduce visibility; the Tu-160 is painted with anti-flashwhite, giving it the nickname among Russian airmen "White Swan". In April 1987, the Tu-160 entered
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress introduced on this model. The belly of the aircraft was painted with anti-flashwhite paint, which was intended to reflect the thermal radiation of a nuclear