All Era’s

Il-2m3 Sturmovik

Il-2m3 Sturmovik

Il-2m3 Sturmovik by Accurate Miniatures 1/48 scale Kit No. 3407 Cost: $25.00 Decals: One version - 566 ShAP (Battle Regiment) of the Soviet VVS, Summer 1944 Comments: Detailed construction; engraved panel lines, highly detailed cockpit and interior History The Il-2...

Junkers D.1

Junkers D.1

The Junkers D.1 was a German single-seat fighter that appeared in relatively small numbers in 1918 toward the end of The Great War. It was the world’s first all-metal, cantilver design, single-seat monoplane fighter. While monoplane fighters had first appeared during World War I as early as 1915, notably the French Morane Saulnier N and Germany’s Fokker Eindekker, Junkers was the first to produce one that featured an all-metal airframe and that did not require external struts or wire bracing to support either the wing or tail…

Junkers F.13

Junkers F.13

Designed and built in Germany during the closing months of World War I, Junkers F.13 was the first all-metal monoplane airliner and a truly modern aircraft for its time. Junkers’ first commercial airplane, it featured a cockpit accommodating two pilots and a fully enclosed, heated cabin seating four passengers in seats fitted with seatbelts, a never-before-seen innovation on motor cars, and used mainly on combat aircraft up to that time. It flew for the first time on June 25, 1919.

Junkers J.1

Junkers J.1

The Junkers J.1 was the first bomber of all-metal construction and was designed around an armoured fuselage intended to withstand heavy small arms fire. Eduard’s kit features a highly detailed cockpit, complete engine, and realistically detailed corrugated surfaces.

Kawanishi Type 94-1 E7K1

Kawanishi Type 94-1 E7K1

The Type 94 E7K1 was a three-seat, twin-float reconnaissance and spotter biplane that entered service with the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) in 1937 and was intended to replace the Navy Type 90-3 reconnaissance seaplane, the Kawanishi E5K1.

Kayaba Type 4 Katsuodori

Kayaba Type 4 Katsuodori

Kayaba Type 4 "Katsuodori" Ram-Jet Fighter by Meng 1/72 scale Kit no. DS-001 Cost: $15.99 Decals: Two versions - Imperial Japanese Army and Imperial Japanese Navy Comments: Engraved panel lines; includes two complete kits History The Kayaba Type 4 Katsuodori was a...

Lightning F.2A

Lightning F.2A

B.A.C. Lightning F.2A/F6 by Trumpeter 1/72 scale Kit No. 1650 Cost: $24.00 Decals: Two versions Comments:  Engraved panel lines, very detailed cockpit, landing gear and missiles; choice of Red Top or Firestreak missiles. History For a history of the "Silver Beast"...

Lockheed Orion Model 9

Lockheed Orion Model 9

The Lockheed Orion was an all-wood monoplane airliner that entered service in 1931, and seated six passengers. It was the first airliner with retractable landing gear, and with a top speed of 220 mph, was nearly 100 mph faster than contemporaries such as the Ford Tri-Motor.

Macchi Castoldi MC 72

Macchi Castoldi MC 72

The Macchi Castoldi M.C. 72 is the aircraft that set the absolute world speed record of 440 mph for racing seaplanes in 1934, a record which stands to this day, nearly ninety years later. First flown on July 16, 1931, the M.C. 72 was specifically designed to beat the British Supermarine S.6B in the 1931 Schneider Cup race. But its revolutionary Fiat V-24 engine, almost too hot to handle, was prone to catch fire in flight and forced a withdrawal from the race. For three years, Macchi’s engineers continued to perfect it until it was ready to for the attempt to set a new world speed record, achieving a speed that front-line military aircraft would not reach for another ten years.

Messerschmitt P.1101

Messerschmitt P.1101

Messerschmitt P.1101 by Dragon/DML 1/72 scale Kit No. 5013 Decals: Two versions - Luftwaffe 1945 Comments: Engraved panel lines, includes jet engine, photo-etch details for cockpit and radio aerial, Ruhrstall X-4 air-to-air missiles History The Messerschmitt P.1101...

Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15

Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15

The MiG-15 was a single-seat, single-engine second generation Soviet jet fighter, built by the Mikoyan-Gurevich Design Bureau and first flown on December 30, 1947. Its design was heavily influenced by German aerospace research conducted during World War II, particularly that associated with the Focke Wulf Ta 183 Huckebein. This Russian jet shocked the West when it appeared in the skies of North Korea in late 1950, causing the U.S. to rush the North American F-86 Sabre into the theatre.

Dassault Mirage F.1C

Dassault Mirage F.1C

The Mirage F.1C succeeded the Mirage III/5 jet fighter series to fulfill the Armee de l’Air requirement for a front-line interceptor and ground attack aircraft. Widely exported, it may be the only combat aircraft to have fought on both sides during the 1991 Gulf War. It served France’s air superiority requirement from 1973 to 1982, when it was phased out in favor of the Mirage 2000.

Morane 230

Morane 230

Heller’s Morane 230 was the standard trainer of the French Air Force in the 1930’s and features highly realistic fabric-over-frame effects, detailed engine, and a basic cockpit.

Nakajima Ki-43 Hayabusa “Peregrine Falcon”

Nakajima Ki-43 Hayabusa “Peregrine Falcon”

Introduced into service in 1941, the Nakajima Ki-43 Hayabusa (Peregrine Falcon) initially dominated even the famed Mitsubishi A6M Zero. In terms of numbers produced, it was the most important fighter of the Imperial Japanese Army during WWII, but by 1944 was being replaced by newer types, and the final stages of the war saw it relegated to the Kamikaze role.

Northrop N-9MA

Northrop N-9MA

The Northrop N-9MA was one of a series of successively larger and more powerful experimental flying wing test beds developed during World War II by Northrop Aircraft Corporation, which ultimately let to the post-war propeller-driven XB-35 bomber and the YB-49 jet-powered bomber, both of which were advanced flying wings manifesting the vision of Jack Northrop. The N-9MA flew for the first time on May 22, 1944.

Vought OS2U Kingfisher

Vought OS2U Kingfisher

Vought OS2U Kingfisher by MPC/Airfix 1/72 scale Cost: $10.00 Decals: Two versions Comments: Old kit; detailing needed History The Chance Vought Kingfisher fulfilled a U.S. Navy Bureau of Aeronautics requirement in the late 1930’s for an observation scout seaplane...