Aerfer Sagittario II (Historical Aircraft)
Thank you to all the people who Upvote, Comment, or Follow. :)
I invested a lot of time and tried to recreate this extraordinarily beautiful jet model as true to detail and scale as possible. The external dimensions as well as the drive, thrust and weight come very close to the original.
History about:
The Aerfer Sagittario 2 (Italian for sagittarius) was a prototype all-metal single-seat lightweight fighter aircraft built in Italy by Aerfer, intended to serve as an interceptor or light tactical support aircraft. First flown in 1956, it became the first Italian aircraft to break the sound barrier in controlled flight when it reached Mach 1.1 during a dive from 13,725 m (45,000 ft).
The firm 'Aerfer' is remembered mostly in connection with the development of Italy's first supersonic jet, the Aerfer Sagittario 2
In 1969 'Aerfer' was merged with the aviation division of Fiat to create Aeritalia. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeritalia)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AerferSagittario2
- this Flight-Model is equiped with a vr. joystick control and gives a real cockpit feeling - no moods required !
INSTRUCTION :
1= Enable Engines
2= Enable Pos.Lights
3= -
4= -
5= -
6= -
'B' = Enable braking device
'C' = different camera settings .. just try it
.... and yes, it's a "simple jet" no unnecessary mod frills... , just for fun !
Image Gallery of: Aerfer Sagittario II
if you like my work please consider this..
Cheers Raendy :D
Specifications
Spotlights
- SemedianIndustries 4.6 years ago
- Trijetz 4.6 years ago
General Characteristics
- Created On Windows
- Wingspan 25.8ft (7.9m)
- Length 33.5ft (10.2m)
- Height 10.0ft (3.0m)
- Empty Weight 2,569lbs (1,165kg)
- Loaded Weight 4,903lbs (2,224kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 4.812
- Wing Loading 22.3lbs/ft2 (109.1kg/m2)
- Wing Area 219.4ft2 (20.4m2)
- Drag Points 2536
Parts
- Number of Parts 135
- Control Surfaces 5
- Performance Cost 530
@RaendyLeBeau a roundel is a symbol put on a military aircraft that shows what country/air force it is from, in this case, you put Italian Air Force roundels on this aircraft.
@Trijets
thank you, appreciate your hints - what do you mean by "roundels" ?
Nice plane! I recommend making the roundels a bit bigger next time though.
@Physicist
thank you very much !! yes you are right ... :)
Fine! It looks good, although it consists of only 135 parts. Often, planes of 500 parts look worse than this.