FSX > Page 1469


1.97Mb (1873 downloads)
2D panel (not VC) for the Avro Vulcan bomber. This aircraft was designed in the fifties during the cold war for the Royal Air Force (first flight in 1953) and was a long range atomic bomber. You can use this model (originaly FS2004/FS2002) :
(you just have to replace the panel. All original gauges for FSX compatibility. I have added an autopilot more convenient than the original one. See instructions in the readme.txt file. Enjoy!
Required files:
required file
Posted Mar 3, 2011 04:44 by Philippe Wallaert


66.38Mb (16495 downloads)
Boeing 757-200 package with virtual cockpit. Model by Project Opensky. Liveries include Iceland Air, Air 2000 and United Airlines
Posted Mar 3, 2011 04:08 by dainel


58.08Mb (10001 downloads)
Boeing 747-400 with virtual cockpit with RR PW and GE. Works with Acceleration or SP2 installed in FSX. Model by Project Opensky. Liveries are Air France, British Airways and Air China
Posted Mar 3, 2011 03:46 by daniel


18.76Mb (6201 downloads)
The full package, both FSX and FS2004. Full package with VC, cockpit, outside views, and more. Comes with 5 different USAF liveries.
The Martin B-57 Canberra was a United States-built, twin jet engine light bomber and reconnaissance aircraft, which entered service with the United States Air Force (USAF) in 1953. The B-57 was initially a version of the English Electric Canberra built under license. However, the Glenn L. Martin Company significantly modified the design and produced several unique variants.
Posted Mar 2, 2011 20:50 by Doomneer

8.04Mb (2739 downloads)
The Martin MB-2 was the first All American Bomber design produced in quantity. It first flew in 1920. This is the plane Gen. Billy Mitchell used to prove an airplane could sink a battleship. It saw service until it was replaced by the Keystone Bombers in the late 20's. This is a native FSX Acceleration project. It has the usual animations and DXT5.dds textures. The VC is based on a real photo and has animated flight controls. The gauges are default except for some original 3D switches. There is no 2D panel. The livery is for the 96th Bomber Squadron based at Langley field. By Paul Clawson
Posted Mar 2, 2011 16:42 by Paul Clawson

150.31Mb (2459 downloads)
My second mission release - See if you are worth calling yourself a rotorhead and fly in the Middle East. This package includes one mission, two repaints (default OH-58 Saifan and DodoSim OH-58 Saifan) and multiple versions for different helicopter types (choose between default Bell 206, Alphasim S-70 Yanshuf and DodoSim Bell 206). Choose between Hebrew/English with English/German subtitles. More than 150 sound files, depending on aircraft model. Different rewards for different models and pilot attitude. FSX Acceleration is required. Enjoy!
Posted Mar 2, 2011 14:22 by T. "Malloy" Morianz


16.27Mb (9044 downloads)
A380-800 China Southern Airlines. Contains model by Projct Airbus with Thomas Ruth's a340-600 virtual cockpit.
Posted Mar 2, 2011 11:40 by daniel

0.49Mb (506 downloads)
This package contains 6 airports in Persian Gulf.
Fixes parking, etc. Airports include:
Abumusa, Bandar, Lengeh, Khark, Lavan, - Sirr + Jask
Posted Mar 2, 2011 11:24 by peyman javanbakht

22.63Mb (1196 downloads)
Is a Venezuelan air terminal located in San Fernando, Apure State. With photo-terrain scenery from satellite imagery in Google Earth. Compatible with FSX only.
This scenery includes terminal building, control tower, fire station, heliports, with realistic textures. Also includes a friendly Auto-Install
Posted Mar 2, 2011 06:10 by David Maldonado


0.08Mb (2938 downloads)
Original views reworked and additionnal views ( defined by camera definitions in the aircraft.cfg file ) for the beautiful Beechcraft Baron 58 by Microsoft.
6 cameras pointing at the aircraft and additional views inside the aircraft.
See Read me.txt file for very easy installation procedures.
Also included is a text file that contains the new camera definitions and a pdf file showing the availability of my similar projects on various websites.
Posted Mar 1, 2011 18:52 by Marc Renaud