AI Spitfires, Mosquitos and Lancasters, RAF Ford 1944, with Present-Day Historic examples.
Posted: 12 Jan 2024, 06:39
This package, for FSX and P3D, provides AI aircraft and flightplans for the upcoming scenery of RAF Ford 1944, by Thomas Grant. The airfield, on the south coast of England, was a major intruder asset supporting the D-Day landings. The project has been assisted by Tim Collins who has researched extensively to enable the content to be as realistic as far as we were able. The AI package features 4 aircraft types that were stationed at the airfield at that time:
• The Spitfire Mk IX
• The Avro Lancaster
• The DH Mosquito VI
• The DH Mosquito XVII/XVIII night-fighters
Present day examples of the first 3 types, for users who may wish to use them at their modern home bases, or at air show scenarios, are also in the package, but without flight plans.
SPITFIRE Mk IX
My previous Spitfire models were some of the first I built when I was learning the ropes 13 years ago. They did not include the Mk IX with the 4-bladed prop. I took the opportunity this time to build the aircraft from scratch with a greater polygon count and additional features. The Ford examples include 10 aircraft from each of 132, 453 and 602 squadrons:


This is the present-day Mk IX of the RAF Battle of Britain Memorial Flight in 2023:

AVRO LANCASTER Mk1
This is a model that I also produced 13 years ago. I have not rebuilt it from scratch, but I have re-worked it considerably, including a new cockpit, frame work and a new crew. I have also added the H2S ground radar faring under the rear fuselage that was a feature of the Mk1 from mid-1943 onwards.


These are the present-day surviving examples of the Lancaster that are either flown regularly or are displayed in taxi-runs. They are:
• The Battle of Britain Memorial Flight PA474.
• Just Jane (NX611) (not yet air worthy).
• The Canadian “Vera” (KB726):

DH MOSQUITO Mk VI
This is probably the more familiar Mosquito version and the models include a choice of bomb bay doors open or closed when parked:

This is the present-day PZ474 belonging to Lewis Air Legends, based in San Antonio Texas in the USA:

KA114 also belongs to Lewis Air legends, but based at Virginia Beach, Virginia, in the USA:

DH MOSQUITO Mk XVII and XVIII
These two versions of the Mosquito feature the night fighter bull nose, the XVIII being differentiated from the XVII only by the radar within it:

Two squadrons of 10 aircraft each, are represented in the package – 96 Sqn RAF, flying the Mk XVIII and 456 Sqn RCAF, flying the XVII:

Both the scenery and the AI packages are all done and will be uploaded shortly.
John
• The Spitfire Mk IX
• The Avro Lancaster
• The DH Mosquito VI
• The DH Mosquito XVII/XVIII night-fighters
Present day examples of the first 3 types, for users who may wish to use them at their modern home bases, or at air show scenarios, are also in the package, but without flight plans.
SPITFIRE Mk IX
My previous Spitfire models were some of the first I built when I was learning the ropes 13 years ago. They did not include the Mk IX with the 4-bladed prop. I took the opportunity this time to build the aircraft from scratch with a greater polygon count and additional features. The Ford examples include 10 aircraft from each of 132, 453 and 602 squadrons:


This is the present-day Mk IX of the RAF Battle of Britain Memorial Flight in 2023:

AVRO LANCASTER Mk1
This is a model that I also produced 13 years ago. I have not rebuilt it from scratch, but I have re-worked it considerably, including a new cockpit, frame work and a new crew. I have also added the H2S ground radar faring under the rear fuselage that was a feature of the Mk1 from mid-1943 onwards.


These are the present-day surviving examples of the Lancaster that are either flown regularly or are displayed in taxi-runs. They are:
• The Battle of Britain Memorial Flight PA474.
• Just Jane (NX611) (not yet air worthy).
• The Canadian “Vera” (KB726):

DH MOSQUITO Mk VI
This is probably the more familiar Mosquito version and the models include a choice of bomb bay doors open or closed when parked:

This is the present-day PZ474 belonging to Lewis Air Legends, based in San Antonio Texas in the USA:

KA114 also belongs to Lewis Air legends, but based at Virginia Beach, Virginia, in the USA:

DH MOSQUITO Mk XVII and XVIII
These two versions of the Mosquito feature the night fighter bull nose, the XVIII being differentiated from the XVII only by the radar within it:

Two squadrons of 10 aircraft each, are represented in the package – 96 Sqn RAF, flying the Mk XVIII and 456 Sqn RCAF, flying the XVII:

Both the scenery and the AI packages are all done and will be uploaded shortly.
John