Airfix Vintage Classics Bristol 192 Belvedere 1:72
Airfix
A significant post-war achievement for Britain's aviation industry, the Bristol Belvedere was a highly capable, tandem-rotor, heavy-lift helicopte...
View full detailsA significant post-war achievement for Britain's aviation industry, the Bristol Belvedere was a highly capable, tandem-rotor, heavy-lift helicopte...
View full detailsThe first Curtiss Tomahawk fighters to arrive in Britain during the Second World War operated in the tactical reconnaissance role and ...
View full detailsThe end of the Second World War saw victorious Allied nations desperately attempting to secure details of German jet technology and high-spee...
View full detailsFor most RAF pilots serving between 1960 and 1988, the Hunting Aircraft (BAC) Jet Provost is extremely familiar. Forming the backbone of RAF ...
View full detailsIn what would often be a very personal dual fought in the skies above Europe between airmen from Allied and Axis air forces, the struggle for ...
View full detailsThe ultimate 'clash of eagles', which came to represent the struggle for aerial supremacy during the Second World War, was undoubtedly conteste...
View full detailsOne of the greatest fighting aeroplanes in the history of aviation, the Messerschmitt Bf 109 was always at the forefront of world fighter d...
View full detailsThe Junkers Ju87 Stuka quickly became one of the most infamous, and feared weapons of the Second World War. The two-man dive bomber first saw actio...
View full detailsA gleaming silver steed flown by the most capable and intrepid young men Britain could call upon, the Bristol Bulldog was one of the mo...
View full detailsAn aircraft which possibly underlines the capabilities of the modern helicopter more effectively than any other type, the mighty Boeing ...
View full detailsThe Gloster Gladiator was developed from the Gloster Gauntlet as a private venture and represented both the peak and the end of the bipl...
View full detailsThe first production Spitfire Mk.I was delivered to RAF No.19 Squadron at Duxford on 4th August 1938, heralding the arrival of a future aviatio...
View full detailsThe importance of the role air power played in the months leading up to D-Day cannot be overstated, with the Allied powers knowing that secu...
View full detailsThe Mk XII was the first production version of the Spitfire to use the Rolls-Royce Griffon engine. The Griffon was a devlopment of the 'R' spri...
View full detailsWhen the Japanese Zero first entered service in 1940, it was without doubt the most advanced naval fighter in the world and quickly earned a...
View full detailsAs the North American Mustang was developed as a direct result of a British Air Ministry requirement, it is somehow fitting that the RAF and...
View full detailsAbout the Aircraft: When the diminutive Messerschmitt Bf109 entered service in February 1935, it was one of the most advanced aircraft in th...
View full detailsThe second of America's great four-engined heavy bombers of the Second World War, the Consolidated B-24 Liberator began development after th...
View full detailsWhen the diminutive Messerschmitt Bf109 entered service in February 1935, it was one of the most advanced aircraft in the world, clearly her...
View full detailsThe P-51D was arguably the definitive variant of the North American Mustang and included several significant improvements to the aircraft’s...
View full detailsDesigned initially to replace the Hawker Hurricane as the complementary high-altitude fighter to the Supermarine Spitfire, the Tphoon instead...
View full detailsFrom the perspective of a student pilot, the de Havilland Tiger Moth was a relatively stable and forgiving aircraft to fly, possessing few handling...
View full detailsOrdered straight from the drawing board this aircraft had been overtaken by fighter development by the outbreak of the Second World War. The ...
View full detailsEntering RAF service some seven years after it had with the Royal Navy, the Blackburn Company received an initial order for 26 new aircraft, ...
View full detailsIn many respects, the Gloster Meteor could be regarded as Britain's jet powered equivalent of the Spitfire, the first of a new breed of fight...
View full detailsThe most capable medium bomber of the day was the twin-engine Vickers Wellington, which first flew in 1936 and entered RAF service with No.99...
View full detailsThe English Electric Lightning was a supersonic jet fighter aircraft of the Cold War era, noted for its great speed. It is the only all-Briti...
View full detailsStill a familiar sight at airfields all over the world, the de Havilland Tiger Moth primary trainer made its first flight back in 1931 and provided...
View full detailsThe handsome Beagle B.206 Basset was a twin-engined light executive transport and military communications aircraft built by the Beagle Aircraft Com...
View full detailsAs helicopter technology continued to advance apace following the end of the Second World War, the operational flexibility offered by rotary powere...
View full detailsAn aircraft that must surely be considered one of the most distinctive types to have ever seen Fleet Air Arm service, the Fairey Gannet was as capa...
View full detailsThe P40, in its various incarnations, served in the United States Army Air Force throughout the Second World War, fighting in Europe, across Asia a...
View full detailsOccupying a significant position in the history of post war British aviation, the Avro Vulcan, with its huge delta wing profile, was without doubt ...
View full detailsWith the RAF already operating Phantoms initially intended for the Royal Navy at Leuchars air base in Fife, the withdrawal of HMS Ark Royal in 197...
View full detailsAs a two-seater trainer, the Vampire T11 excelled. The side by side seating ensured both pilots had good visibility. The aircraft's inherent ...
View full detailsOne of the greatest fighter aircraft of WWII, this version fought alongside the Spitfire and actually shot down and destroyed more aircraft ...
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