It’s a big British bomber, based in Franz’s WWII RP. The details aren’t all there yet, but will be soon.
So, what should this thing be called?
It’s a big British bomber, based in Franz’s WWII RP. The details aren’t all there yet, but will be soon.
So, what should this thing be called?
@tommie Indeed I am. That’s cool! A pleasure to meet you! There’s a list of pilots floating around somewhere on the forums, I can try and find it.
Hey man, interested in gliders? I saw you were a solist in your bio. As a solist myself, I really like to meet other pilots!
Maybe just call it the.....
Avro Victoria
@Randomdoggo On my list, it would be organized under the United Kingdom section, but I’d be glad to have you build with us!
@FranzPeterSiegfried Ooo, sound cool.
@JamesBoA Well, yes, but actually no.
Again, it’s not a replica. It’s my own design heavily influenced by the Lancaster, not the Halifax.
Noice
NP!
@Jim1the1Squid Thanks for the help, though!
Ok.
@Jim1the1Squid That’d be a cool plane name for a crew, but maybe not for the plane. I think I might just go with the Liverpool, or another British city name.
The Lancaster Typhoon?
@FranzPeterSiegfried any ideas?
@Jim1the1Squid Well, I WOULD name it that, if that name wasn’t taken by the real plane, so it wouldn’t make sense (this is a fictional bomber BASED on the Lancaster, but it has swept back wings and 8 engines)
The Avro Lancaster.
It has the appearance of one.
@Thelegitpilot13
It sort of looks like a mad fighter thingy I built a while ago.
@TheFantasticTyphoon I guess? I kind of modeled it off of the Lancaster, though I put that lightly, as it is a crazy build.
@Thelegitpilot13
That aircraft actually looks more like a Halifax than a Lancaster.
@Thelegitpilot13
Liverpool? That's an English city and it begins with "L".
@TheFantasticTyphoon Oh, that’s good to know. I’ll change that up. But do you have any ideas for names? I was gonna go with liberator, but that sounds too... American.
The "Lancaster" line of aircraft were named after English cities or towns. Beginning with "L" was not important. For example the Lancaster was developed from an aircraft called the Manchester. An exception to this general rule is the Shackleton, which was named after a famous explorer.