Hobby Master Archive

Air Power Jets 1/72

F-16

Lockheed F-16D Polish Air Force 6.eskadra lotnicza (Best Flying Unit) 31. BLT, NATO Tiger Meet 2014, Schleswig-Jagel Air Base, Germany with sniper pod

HA3835

Hobby Master 1/72 Air Power Series HA3835 Lockheed F-16D Polish Air Force with sniper pod 6.eskadra lotnicza (Best Flying Unit) 31. BLT NATO Tiger Meet 2014 Schleswig-Jagel Air Base, Germany

Professionally painted.

Great attention to detail.

All markings are Tampoed (pad applied).

Option to display the model on a stand that is provided.

Model can be shown with the landing gear in the down or up positions.

Canopy can be displayed open or closed.

Pilot figure included.

Extremely heavy metal with a minimum of plastic.

Highly collectable.

The F-16 Fighting Falcon was produced by General Dynamics who became Lockheed who then merged with Martin Marietta to become Lockheed Martin. The F-16 entered service in January 1979 as a multi-role jet fighter that evolved into an all-weather multi-role aircraft capable of sustaining 9-g turns. The F-16 is relatively inexpensive to purchase and maintain so the U.S. and 25 other countries added it to their inventory. The Fighting Falcon is referred to by its pilots as the “Viper” and will remain in USAF service until 2025.

31 Baza Lotnictwa Taktycznego (31st Air Base) is the largest Polish Air Force unit and on August 23, 2007 Polish Air Force 6. Eskadra Lotnictwa Taktycznego (6th Tactical Squadron) / 31 Baza Lotnictwa Taktycznego (31st Air Base) received Lockheed F-16D 4084 c/n JD-9 (US Military serial 03-0084). This aircraft took part in NATO Tiger Meet 2014 held at Schleswig-Jagel, Germany and hosted by Taktisches Luftwaffengeschwader 51 ‘Immelmann’ (Tactical Airwing 51). At the conclusion of the 10 day event, 6. elt was awarded the “Best Flying Unit” trophy.

General specifications F-16 Fighting Falcon Primary Function - Multi-role fighter Manufacturer - General Dynamics Corp. / Lockheed Martin Corp. Initial Unit cost - F-16C/D, $20 million plus First Deployed - January 1979 (F-16A) Crew - 1 x F-16C / 1 or 2 x F-16D Power Plant - F-16C/D 1 x Pratt and Whitney F100-PW-200/220/229 or 1 x General Electric F110-GE-100/129 Thrust - F-16C/D / 27,000 lb (12,150 kg) Length - 49 ft, 5 in (14.8 m) Height - 16 ft (4.8 m) Wingspan - 32 ft, 8 in (9.8 m) Speed - 1,500 mph (Mach 2 @ altitude) Ceiling - Above 50,000 ft (15 km) Maximum Takeoff Weight - 37,500 lb (16,875 kg) Range - Greater than 2,425 mi (2,100 nm / 3,900 km) Combat Radius F-16C 851.6 mi (1,370 km / 740 nm) w/ 2 x 2,000 lb bombs + 2 x AIM-9 + 1,040 U.S. gal external tanks 391.3 mi (630 km / 340 nm) w/ 4 x 2,000 lb bombs + 2 x AIM-9 + 340 U.S. gal external tanks 230.2 mi (370 km / 200 nm) + 2 hr. 10 min. patrol w/ 2 x AIM-7 + 2 x AIM-9 + 1,040 lb U.S. gal external tanks Armament 1 x M-61A1 20mm multi-barrel cannon with 500 rounds External stations can carry up to six air-to-air missiles Conventional air-to-air and air-to-surface munitions Electronic countermeasure pods.

Added to archive2015-11-19
Last modified2015-11-19
LeafletOctober 2015