Hobby Master 1/72 Sabre Mk.6 (F-86F-40) JA-344, JG 71 "Richthofen", Germany, 1961 Diecast Aircraft

Hobby Master 1/72 Sabre Mk.6 (F-86F-40) JA-344, JG 71 "Richthofen", Germany, 1961 Diecast Aircraft

$184.99

Description

General Background

The Canadair Sabre was built in two plants in Canada under license from North American Aviation. They were produced in 6 variants, Mk. 1 through 6. The Mk. 1 was a single prototype to check the accuracy of Canadair's manufacturing equipment. 350 Mk. 2's, 1 Mk. 3 to use as a test bed for the Orenda 3 engine, 438 Mk. 4's, 370 Mk. 5's and 655 Mk. 6's were manufactured. Over a dozen countries have operated the Canadair Sabre in one variant or another.

The Aircraft

As West Germany's first operational jet fighter unit, JG 71 was formed in June 1959 and equipped with 50 Canadair Sabre Mk.6s. Canadair Sabre Mk. 6 JG+344 MSN 1757 from JG 71, 2 Staffel was lost on a training flight. On August 7, 1963 JG+344, piloted by Feldwebel Eckhard Wendt, was lost when it crashed on a target range at Aurich-Brockzetel. The pilot as well as 5 people on the ground were killed. In 1963 the unit moved to Wittmundhafen AB and re-equipped with the F-104, an aircraft Erich Hartmann disliked.

Specifications :

Dimensions Mk. 5 and Mk. 6
Dimensions
Length: 37 ft 6 in (11.43 m)
Wingspan: 37 ft 1.5 in (13.32 m)
Height: 14 ft 9 in (4.49 m)
Powerplant:
Mk. 5:
Empty: 10,662 lbs (4,836 kg)
Maximum: 17,581 lbs (7,975 kg)
Mk. 6:
Empty: 10,638 lbs (4,825 kg)
Maximum: 17,560 lbs (7,965 kg)
Performance:
Cruise Speed Mk. 5 and Mk. 6: 552 mph (888 km/h)
Maximum Speed:
Mk. 5: 696 mph (1,120 km/h)
Mk. 6: 698 mph (1,123 km/h)
Range:
Mk. 5: 1,220 miles (1,933 km)
Mk. 6: 1,486 mile (2,391 km)
Ceiling:
Mk. 5: 50,700 ft (15,453 m)
Mk. 6: 54,100 ft (16,490 m)

Specifications

Brand Hobby Master

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