The exhaust effects are Krazy's
there should be a gauge to use them in fs9
have not seen him in a while though
H
The exhaust effects are Krazy's
there should be a gauge to use them in fs9
have not seen him in a while though
H
Maybe this nice rusty color?
Cees
Oh my God. You guys found my plane on my FIL's website. That was the second plane I ever did. I don't have any of my old source files anymore. I'd love to find it. I also did that Ki-04. I got original prints for it from the designer in Japan. His son, a doctor and I are good friends. His father passed away some time ago. It was due to make it's first flight on the day Japan surrendered. We brought it back and it ended up covered in cement at O'Hare airport in Chicago.
I'm not over the hill. I'm on the back nine.
Wow, you did find a thread from 15 years ago! Meanwhile another Heinkel He-100 D has arrived. Your model was good at its time, but people learned a lot over the years and computers got much faster, memory became cheap, which allowed more complex models.
A model by Chris Lampard and Shessi. Or actually two models as they did the Prototype and the "production" model (or was it a propaganda model?)
Cheers,
Huub
The difference between the He100 D & V8?
I get it that the V8 is the 8th version, is the D the 1st?
Robin
Cape Town, South Africa
In this case the "V" comes from "Versuchsflugzeug", a Mick already mentioned this is a prototype. The "V" as in V-1, V-2 and V-3, use near the end of the war, stood for "Vergeltungswaffen"(Weapon of retaliation)
As Mick already mentioned there were no previous production versions of the He100. There were 10 prototypes and there was a D-0 (pre) production version and the D-1, the final production version. However the entire aircraft was mainly used for propaganda purposes. The choice to use a "D " for the first production version was most likely done to mislead the enemy. In total only 25 were build, including the 10 prototypes.
The He100 was difficult to build and the German Aviation ministry wanted Heinkel to build bombers and not fighters. Heinkel also had the He280 turbojet fighter prototype already available in summer 1940! A year before the first prototype of the Me262 flew.
Cheers,
Huub
According to www.secretprojects.co.uk, the V8 was the record breaking version.
There were 3 D-0's that were sold to the Japanese Imperial Navy, & about 12 D-1's that were eventially used Heinkel's Marienehe factory defense unit.
There's a lot more info here:
Heinkel He 100 - Wikipedia
Robin
Cape Town, South Africa
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