Vickers Wellington
-Trim for well... Trim.
-Vtol Down to open the bomb bay and the landing gear do retract just press the "G" or whatever your retract button is.
Description: The Vickers Wellington was a British twin-engined, long range medium bomber designed in the mid-1930s at Brooklands in Weybridge, Surrey, by Vickers-Armstrongs' Chief Designer, Rex Pierson with structure designed by Barnes Wallis, in response to specification B.9/32. Issued in the middle of 1932, this called for a twin-engined day bomber of higher performance than any previous design. It was widely used as a night bomber in the early years of the Second World War, before being superseded as a bomber by the larger four-engined "heavies" such as the Avro Lancaster.
Specifications
Spotlights
- ChiChiWerx 8.3 years ago
- aseder 8.3 years ago
- Sunnyskies 8.3 years ago
General Characteristics
- Created On Windows
- Wingspan 82.0ft (25.0m)
- Length 69.4ft (21.1m)
- Height 20.9ft (6.4m)
- Empty Weight 26,495lbs (12,018kg)
- Loaded Weight 42,690lbs (19,364kg)
Performance
- Horse Power/Weight Ratio 0.187
- Wing Loading 34.0lbs/ft2 (166.2kg/m2)
- Wing Area 1,254.0ft2 (116.5m2)
- Drag Points 13859
Parts
- Number of Parts 250
- Control Surfaces 11
- Performance Cost 1,077
@ChiChiWerx You caught me! Yes I doubled the engines (Did the same thing on the P-47), I placed two engines side by side and nudged them into position. The engine wrap was a round fuselage block nudged inside and then nudged upwards so that it stuck out of the engine and created the colouring.
@Mathieson so it seems you have some clever tricks up your sleeve for this one: can you confirm that you doubled the engines by mirroring them? Also, you managed to wrap the engines to provide realistic coloring, cool!
THE WELLY!!! @Mathieson
@ChiChiWerx Thank You!
Fantastic! That's all I can say.