
Before you ask, the white smoke is condensation. METAR reported a temperature of M28

Been sidelined with a bad cold today, so I took the time to play around with a less used AI model I had lying around. So without further ado, I give you the Air Group of the 6952nd Guards Air Base at Belaya. Warfare.be lists 36 Tu-22M's, 2 An-12's, and 3 An-30's (although one of them appears to be an An-26). Most of the bort codes could be obtained from russianplanes.net, although I could only pick up 22 Tu-22M codes, so they were topped off with some random ones (I love random.org).
For the repaints, I used the standard Russian Air Force paint that came with the base Tu-22M model (available here: http://www.avsimrus.com/f/fs2004-ai-tra ... 20358.html ), the An-12 paints by Mike Pearson can be found in skj_an12_ruaf_part_2.zip & skj_an12_ruaf_part_3.zip at AVSIM, and for the An-26 paint I used 56 Blue from Nikolai Samsonovs package cis_an26_texturepack2_269023.zip as a stand-in. I couldn't find any An-30 paints, so I just cleaned up the paintkit of any excess and use that for the time being.
The scenery for Belaya is by scottr5213 & regan123 and can be found here: http://www.militaryaiworks.com/newforum ... 420#p99103
The zip includes flightplans, waypoint files (entirely random locations, although mainly isolated away from major cities on Google Earth), & VCPMods if you're the type who listen in on ATC.
And finally, if you haven't already, make sure your Tu-22M model has had its parking radius reduced.
Oh, and before you ask, 6952nd Guards Air Base is actually Ukrainka, but it appears that the 6953rd Guards Air Base (which Belaya was renamed to in 2009) has been renamed again and placed under it. A detachment, if you will. I think.