FS2004 > Page 718

3.48Mb (473 downloads)
FS2004 EE Canberra WT303, 249 Sqn, RAF circa 1966. Textures for the payware Alphasim aircraft.
The English Electric Canberra was first flown in 1950, and yet there were still versions of this fine aircraft in service at the outset of the 21st century. An excellent design overall, the type was also adopted and manufactured in the United States as the Martin B-57. A large number of variants were produced, including high-altitude reconnaissance, attack, nuclear strike, night interdiction, and trainers. The type was initially intended to fly very high and fast and was thus equipped with no defensive armament. Several speed and altitude records were garnered by the Canberra in the years immediately following its introduction into service. In 1957, a rocket-boosted Canberra flew to over 70,000 feet, a staggering altitude at the time.
Repaint by Ben Hartmann of UKMIL
Posted Dec 19, 2008 11:54 by Ben Hartmann

2.92Mb (1009 downloads)
FS2004 North American AT-6C/AT-6G N3676F Photoreal Textures only. Textures for the payware Alphasim aircraft
This is a repaint only for Alphasim's Texan/Harvard.The North American T-6 Texan was an excellent design that served as a basic transitional combat trainer in all branches of U.S. service as well as in countries worldwide. U.S. Navy pilots utilised the type under the SNJ designation, the most common versions being the SNJ-4, SNJ-5 and SNJ-6. The RAF was very taken with the design and adopted it as the Harvard. Later versions were manufactured in Canada and the type saw service in countries worldwide. An excellent all-round trainer, the type was quite good at teaching new pilots to avoid the accelerated stall, as a wing would snap round quite unexpectedly if the pilot was unwary. Approximately 17,000 of the type were built and some 350 are still airworthy. Repaint is based on Alphasim's paintkit.
Repaint by Ben Hartmann of UKMIL
Posted Dec 19, 2008 11:53 by Ben Hartmann

3.82Mb (595 downloads)
FS2004 EE Canberra WE113, 13 Sqn, RAF circa 1983.
The English Electric Canberra was first flown in 1950, and yet there were still versions of this fine aircraft in service at the outset of the 21st century. An excellent design overall, the type was also adopted and manufactured in the United States as the Martin B-57. A large number of variants were produced, including high-altitude reconnaissance, attack, nuclear strike, night interdiction, and trainers. The type was initially intended to fly very high and fast and was thus equipped with no defensive armament. Several speed and altitude records were garnered by the Canberra in the years immediately following its introduction into service. In 1957, a rocket-boosted Canberra flew to over 70,000 feet, a staggering altitude at the time.
Repaint by Ben Hartmann of UKMIL
Posted Dec 19, 2008 11:51 by Ben Hartmann

3.52Mb (474 downloads)
FS2004 EE Canberra WH948, 98 Sqn, RAF circa 1972, Textures for the payware Alphasim Canberra.
The English Electric Canberra was first flown in 1950, and yet there were still versions of this fine aircraft in service at the outset of the 21st century. An excellent design overall, the type was also adopted and manufactured in the United States as the Martin B-57. A large number of variants were produced, including high-altitude reconnaissance, attack, nuclear strike, night interdiction, and trainers. The type was initially intended to fly very high and fast and was thus equipped with no defensive armament. Several speed and altitude records were garnered by the Canberra in the years immediately following its introduction into service. In 1957, a rocket-boosted Canberra flew to over 70,000 feet, a staggering altitude at the time.
Repaint by Ben Hartmann of UKMIL
Posted Dec 19, 2008 11:49 by Ben Hartmann


3.45Mb (3157 downloads)
This model reproduces the aircraft on display in Vigna di Valle Aeronautical Museum (near Rome) and features reflective metallic skin plus full animations.
The panel background has been created entirely from scratch, based on photographic material found on the net and some photos from official documents.
Most of the gauges are default gauges and some have been created by the authors.
Included in this model there is also a simple Virtual Cockpit, with working essential flight instruments and animated flight controls.
Capt. I. D'Attomo
Capt. G.Quai
Posted Dec 19, 2008 04:09 by Capt. I. D'Attomo

9.63Mb (4427 downloads)
NIKI Airbus A320-214 - OE-LEX. Model by Project Airbus.
Repaint by Denis Minaev
Posted Dec 19, 2008 03:59 by Denis Minaev

0.13Mb (3984 downloads)
Update for A F Scrub Spitfire Mk 22 for FS2004/FSX:
If you cannot see the Spitfire MK 22 in FS9, just replace the aircraft.cfg,
fix by A.F.Scrub
Required files:
required file
Posted Dec 19, 2008 03:53 by A.F.Scrub


11.49Mb (3088 downloads)
Dassault MD311 Flamant. No.276. Complete package with interior and VC. Model by Emmanuel Geffroy.
Posted Dec 18, 2008 11:18 by philippe42

0.88Mb (2840 downloads)
Repaint of the Gmax Agusta A109A in West Virginia Medical livery. You need the original package for this to work.
Required files:
required file
Posted Dec 18, 2008 09:24 by Shane Griffith

3.14Mb (10061 downloads)
ArrestorCables 2.6 for FSX/FS9 (updated). This is freeware. The exclusivity agreement with Abacus expired years ago. Uses FSUIPC for cables, catapult, fuel ops, & battle damage. NEW automatic modes support moving FSX carriers. by Rich Hogen arrcab26.zip
Posted Dec 17, 2008 21:27 by Rich Hogen