Corgi Aviation Archive Collector Series AA34110 Blackburn Buccaneer S.Mk 2B Diecast Model RAF No.208 Sqn, XV160, RAF Honnington, England, Northern Express Excercises, 1977 | Limited Edition 1000 Pieces Worldwide |
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1:72 Scale | | Length | | Width |
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Blackburn Buccaneer S.Mk 2B | | 10.5" | | 7.25" |
Blackburn Buccaneer XV160 first entered service as S.Mk2 with the Royal Navy, based at RNAS Lossiemouth, on 6th March 1967. Later the same month XV160 famously took part in the bombing of the 118,000 ton Super Tanker "Torrey Canyon" which ran aground on the Seven Stones Reef off Lands End in Cornwall. In February 1969 the aircraft was returned to Hawker Siddeley and upgraded to S.Mk2B standard. She was delivered to the Royal Air Force in 1970 and served firstly with 237 OCU from 1973 and then 208 Sqn from 1976, both based at Honington. In November 1977 the aircraft was temporarily over-painted in a winter distemper camouflage in order to take part in the "Northern Express" low level exercise in Norway. The aircraft was lost in September 1982 off Sardinia when it stalled and crashed during an attack manoeuvre.
Designed as a specialized strike aircraft capable of carrying nuclear weapons, the Blackburn Buccaneer was first flown on April 30, 1958. This mid-wing, twin-engine monoplane had a number of advanced features, including an area-ruled fuselage and a variable incidence tailplane. The Buccaneer served with the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force between 1962 and 1994, seeing action in the first Gulf War when 12 Buccaneers flew 218 missions to drop bombs and to provide a laser designation capability for other British aircraft. Buccaneers also served with the Fleet Air Arm between 1962 and 1978, where some were modified to carry anti-ship missiles. © Copyright 2003-2024 The Flying Mule, Inc.
Corgi's 1:72 scale Buccaneer has small wings with vortex generators molded to the top surface behind the simulated stainless steel leading edge. The most notable unique feature of this model is the massive, articulated, spring-loaded air brake at the rear, which is easy to display in the deployed position and snaps shut with almost no gap. The hinged tail hook below rotates and can also be displayed in the deployed position. The robust metal landing gear is keyed and is easy to install for ground display and provides true tracking of the gear.
© Copyright 2003-2014 The Flying Mule, Inc.
The Corgi "Aviation Archive" range presents highly-detailed, ready-made diecast models of military and civilian aircraft. The vast Aviation Archive range has become the standard by which all other diecast airplane ranges are judged. Each Corgi model is based on a specific aircraft from an important historical or modern era of flight, and has been authentically detailed from original documents and archival library material. Famous airplanes and aviators from both military and commercial airline aviation are all honored.
Corgi "Aviation Archive" diecast airplanes feature:
- Diecast metal construction with some plastic components.
- Realistic panel lines, antennas, access panels and surface details.
- Pad printed markings and placards that won't fade or peel like decals.
- Interchangeable extended/retracted landing gear with rotating wheels.
- Poseable presention stand to display the aircraft "in flight".
- Many limited editions with numbered certificate of authenticity.
- Detailed, hand-painted pilot and crew member figures.
- Authentic detachable ordnance loads complete with placards.
- Selected interchangeable features such as speed-brakes, opened canopies and access panels.
- Selected moving parts such as gun turrets, control surfaces and swing-wings.
© Copyright 2003-2024 The Flying Mule, Inc.