A.V.Arc Arrowdawn
The brainchild of the then-junior engineer Niifle Tsarmi (and the result of an alcohol-fuelled late-night outing with coworkers), the Aviarc Arrowdawn was a medium range, supersonic light bomber that used the largest available turbojet engines available to the company on an airframe that was not expected to support them. It was used extensively by Canarvia, Vanarya, and Macadarlia as a maritime patrol aircraft.
Note: 9 times out of 10 you're not going to need to jack up the throttle all the way to 100% to fly, but if you're a madlad and want this thing to go supersonic all the time, I would advise replacing the inner two Cleavers with fuel tanks.
The sample here is dressed in VNAF Air Force Blue (dark grey with large navy blue accents, basically).
5 - anti-collision lights
6 - landing and taxi lights
7 - navigation lights
If the Arrowdawn looks familiar, you're not seeing things; it's basically a reskin of the Model 16 with a completely redone cockpit section, fuselage, and missile pylon system. The Model 16 was itself a reskin of the Model 3 Mod G, the latter of which isn't based on any real aircraft. However, the proportions of the fuselage and the wings were modelled after commercial airliners.
Specifications
General Characteristics
- Created On Windows
- Wingspan 67.0ft (20.4m)
- Length 76.8ft (23.4m)
- Height 14.6ft (4.5m)
- Empty Weight 40,525lbs (18,382kg)
- Loaded Weight 52,285lbs (23,716kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 2.578
- Wing Loading 79.7lbs/ft2 (389.0kg/m2)
- Wing Area 656.2ft2 (61.0m2)
- Drag Points 10425
Parts
- Number of Parts 165
- Control Surfaces 5
- Performance Cost 1,028
it's a very bad idea to put cleaver missiles on wings. it makes the plane go crazy after one is fired.
Very nice! Going over mach 1 might be a little fast for this thing but it looks very good, especially the nose/cockpit area, which is fantastic!