Here are some more images of Hasegawa's 1/32 scale General Dynamics F-16 C Fighting Falcon.
From Wikipedia"
The General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon is a multirole jet fighter aircraft originally developed by General Dynamics for the United States Air Force (USAF). Designed as a lightweight day fighter, it evolved into a successful all-weather multirole aircraft. Over 4,400 aircraft have been built since production was approved in 1976.
Though no longer being purchased by the U.S. Air Force, improved
versions are still being built for export customers. In 1993, General
Dynamics sold its aircraft manufacturing business to the Lockheed Corporation, which in turn became part of Lockheed Martin after a 1995 merger with Martin Marietta.
The Fighting Falcon is a dogfighter with numerous innovations including a frameless bubble canopy for better visibility, side-mounted control stick to ease control while maneuvering, a seat reclined 30 degrees to reduce the effect of g-forces on the pilot, and the first use of a relaxed static stability/fly-by-wire flight control system that makes it a highly nimble aircraft. The F-16 has an internal M61 Vulcan cannon and has 11 hardpoints for mounting weapons, and other mission equipment.
Although the F-16's official name is "Fighting Falcon", it is known to
its pilots as the "Viper", due to it resembling a viper snake and
after the Battlestar Galactica Colonial Viper starfighter.
In
addition to USAF active, reserve, and air national guard units, the
aircraft is used by the USAF aerial demonstration team, the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds, and as an adversary/aggressor aircraft by the United States Navy. The F-16 has also been procured to serve in the air forces of 25 other nations.
The
U.S. Air Force initially ordered 15 "Full-Scale Development" (FSD)
aircraft (11 single-seat and four two-seat models) for its flight test
program, but this was reduced to eight (six F-16A single-seaters and
two F-16B two-seaters).
The YF-16 design was altered for the production F-16. The fuselage was
lengthened by 10.6 in (0.269 m), a larger nose radome was fitted to
house the AN/APG-66 radar, wing area was increased from 280 sq ft (26 m2) to 300 sq ft (28 m2),
the tailfin height was decreased slightly, the ventral fins were
enlarged, two more stores stations were added, and a single side-hinged
nosewheel door replaced the original double doors. These modifications
increased the F-16's weight approximately 25% over that of the YF-16
prototypes.
Manufacture of the FSD F-16s got underway at General Dynamics' Fort Worth, Texas
plant in late 1975, with the first example, an F-16A, being rolled out
on 20 October 1976, followed by its first flight on 8 December. The
initial two-seat model achieved its first flight on 8 August 1977. The
initial production-standard F-16A flew for the first time on 7 August
1978 and its delivery was accepted by the USAF on 6 January 1979. The
F-16 was given its formal nickname of “Fighting Falcon” on 21 July 1980,
entering USAF operational service with the 388th Tactical Fighter Wing
at Hill AFB on 1 October 1980.
On 7 June 1975, the four European partners, now known as the European Participation Group, signed up for 348 aircraft at the Paris Air Show.
This was split among the European Participation Air Forces (EPAF) as
116 for Belgium, 58 for Denmark, 102 for the Netherlands, and 72 for
Norway. These would be produced on two European production lines, one in
the Netherlands at Fokker's Schiphol-Oost facility and the other at SABCA's Gossellies plant in Belgium; production would be divided among them as 184 and 164 units, respectively. Norway's Kongsberg Vaapenfabrikk and Denmark's Terma A/S
also manufactured parts and subassemblies for the EPAF aircraft.
European co-production was officially launched on 1 July 1977 at the
Fokker factory. Beginning in mid-November 1977, Fokker-produced
components were shipped to Fort Worth for assembly of fuselages, which
were in turn shipped back to Europe (initially to Gossellies starting in
January 1978); final assembly of EPAF-bound aircraft began at the
Belgian plant on 15 February 1978, with deliveries to the Belgian Air Force beginning in January 1979. The Dutch line started up in April 1978 and delivered its first aircraft to the Royal Netherlands Air Force in June 1979. In 1980 the first aircraft were delivered to the Royal Norwegian Air Force by SABCA and to the Royal Danish Air Force by Fokker.
Since then, a further production line has been established at Ankara, Turkey, where Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) has produced 232 Block 30/40/50 F-16s under license for the Turkish Air Force
during the late 1980s and 1990s, and has 30 Block 50 Advanced underway
for delivery from 2010; TAI also built 46 Block 40s for Egypt in the
mid-1990s. Korean Aerospace Industries
opened another production line for the KF-16 program, producing 140
Block 52s from the mid-1990s to mid-2000s. If India selects the F-16IN
for its Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft procurement, a sixth F-16 production line will be established in that nation to produce at least 108 fighters.
- F-16C/D
- The F-16C (single seat) and F-16D (two seat) variants entered production in 1984. The first C/D version was the Block 25 with improved cockpit avionics and radar which added all-weather capability with beyond-visual-range (BVR) AIM-7 and AIM-120 air-air missiles. Block 30/32, 40/42, and 50/52 were later C/D versions. The F-16C/D had a unit cost of US$18.8 million (1998).
Great looking F-16 man! Just out of curiosity though, what missiles do you have on the wingtip stations?
ReplyDeleteThanks Jon - You know that's a good question. It's similar in appearance to a AGM-88 HARM but it's smaller and the instructions don't seem to indicate what it is.
ReplyDeleteThat's why I asked. At first I thought it was a HARM and I was going to mention that I don't think they can mount them on station 1 and 9. But it looked different, almost like a mix between a HARM and an AMRAAM. Weird. Either way, nice build!
ReplyDeleteI'm going to keep an eye out though.
ReplyDeleteAGM-45 Shrike
ReplyDelete