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Well, the RAF now thinks it is definitely the former... Tunnock’s Tea Cakes have been deemed fit to fly by the RAF after they were banned from flights 60 years ago. The Scottish snack was a ...
Royal Air Force pilots could be able to enjoy a Tunnock’s tea cake at 30,000ft after a 60-year myth they explode was busted.
Tunnox Tea Cake covered the windscreen and the flight controls - proving a sticky flight back. Tunnock's Tea Cakes fit-to-fly with RAF. Picture: Alamy That's until the RAF Centre of Aerospace Medicine ...
When the captain pulled an emergency depressurising switch the iconic Scottish treat erupted - leaving a sticky mess over the ...
Popular Scottish snack was prohibited by Air Force in 1965 after they ‘exploded’ in the cockpit during a training mission ...
As far as in-flight calamities go, the explosion of a pack of Tunnock's tea cakes definitely takes the biscuit. So when disaster allegedly struck on an RAF flight in 1965, plastering the ...
The RAF has finally cleared Tunnock's Tea Cakes for flight after a 60-year ban, following tests that proved the sweet treats don't pose a danger at high altitude. The popular Scottish confections ...
Tunnock’s tea cakes have been cleared to be taken on board RAF planes after a 60-year-old myth they explode was debunked. The snack was said to be banned from RAF flights in 1965 after one ...