
Vendor
Price
RWD 14b-Czapla 1:48

RWD 14b Czapla 1:48
Model dostępny w przedsprzedaży - czas wysyłki do 8 tygodni.
Seria modeli limitowana - ok 90 sztuk.
Zestaw zawiera elementy żywicy oraz wydruki 3D, blaszki, kalkomanię i maski.
Availability: small amount
Dispatched within: 10 working days
De Havilland DH.90 Dragonfly 1:48

De Havilland DH.90 Dragonfly 1:48 scale.
Availability: sold out
Hawker Nimrod Mk.1 1:48 scale

Availability: small amount
Dispatched within: 10 working days
Nakajima KO-4

The NiD.29 was an equal-span biplane with ailerons on both upper and lower wings. It had a fixed tailskid landing gear, a nose-mounted engine and a single open cockpit for the pilot. The prototype NiD 29 was evaluated by the French Air Force in July 1918 and a pre-production batch was ordered on 21 August 1918. It was powered by a Hispano-Suiza engine. The Italian Regia Aeronautica bought 175 aircraft including 95 built by Macchi as the Macchi-Nieuport 29 and 80 built by Caproni. Sweden bought nine aircraft and designated them J 2. The Japanese company Kajmakana bought a pattern aircraft and built 608 for the Imperial Japanese Army as the Ko-4.
Availability: sold out
Nieuport Ni.29 C-1

The NiD.29 was an equal-span biplane with ailerons on both upper and lower wings. It had a fixed tailskid landing gear, a nose-mounted engine and a single open cockpit for the pilot. The prototype NiD 29 was evaluated by the French Air Force in July 1918 and a pre-production batch was ordered on 21 August 1918. It was powered by a Hispano-Suiza engine. The Italian Regia Aeronautica bought 175 aircraft including 95 built by Macchi as the Macchi-Nieuport 29 and 80 built by Caproni. Sweden bought nine aircraft and designated them J 2. The Japanese company Kajmakana bought a pattern aircraft and built 608 for the Imperial Japanese Army as the Ko-4.
Availability: sold out
Macchi Ni.29

The NiD.29 was an equal-span biplane with ailerons on both upper and lower wings. It had a fixed tailskid landing gear, a nose-mounted engine and a single open cockpit for the pilot. The prototype NiD 29 was evaluated by the French Air Force in July 1918 and a pre-production batch was ordered on 21 August 1918. It was powered by a Hispano-Suiza engine. The Italian Regia Aeronautica bought 175 aircraft including 95 built by Macchi as the Macchi-Nieuport 29 and 80 built by Caproni. Sweden bought nine aircraft and designated them J 2. The Japanese company Kajmakana bought a pattern aircraft and built 608 for the Imperial Japanese Army as the Ko-4.
Availability: sold out
FOCKE WULF 56 STÖSSER

The Focke Wulf Fw 56 Stösser (German: goshawk) was a single-engine, high-wing monoplane advanced trainer, built in the 1930s in Germany. The first prototype flew for the first time in November 1933. About 1,000 aircraft were built, mostly used by Germany, though numbers were used by Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, Spain, Romania, Netherland and other.
Availability: sold out
RWD 14b-Czapla 1:32

The photos show almost all the components - the model - some of them are still undergoing corrections (interior elements, compasses, fire extinguishers) - these are elements that will be 3D printed and will be included in the set.
Availability: small amount
Dispatched within: 10 working days
Curtiss P-1A Hawk

The Curtiss F6C Hawk was a late 1920s American naval biplane fighter aircraft. It was part of the long line of Curtiss Hawk airplanes built by the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company for the American military.
Originally designed for land-based use, the Model 34C was virtually identical to the P-1 Hawk in United States Army Air Corps service. The United States Navy ordered nine, but starting with the sixth example, they were strengthened for carrier-borne operations and redesignated Model 34D. Flown from the carriers Langley and Lexington from 1927–30, most of the later variants passed to Marine fighter-bomber units, while a few were flown for a time as twin-float seaplanes.
Availability: sold out
Curtiss F6C-1

The Curtiss F6C Hawk was a late 1920s American naval biplane fighter aircraft. It was part of the long line of Curtiss Hawk airplanes built by the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company for the American military.
Originally designed for land-based use, the Model 34C was virtually identical to the P-1 Hawk in United States Army Air Corps service. The United States Navy ordered nine, but starting with the sixth example, they were strengthened for carrier-borne operations and redesignated Model 34D. Flown from the carriers Langley and Lexington from 1927–30, most of the later variants passed to Marine fighter-bomber units, while a few were flown for a time as twin-float seaplanes.
Availability: sold out
Hawker Nimrod Mk.1 1:32 scale

Availability: small amount
Dispatched within: 10 working days
Sopwith Baby British Service

The Baby was used as a shipborne reconnaissance and bomber aircraft operating from seaplane carriers and cruisers, as well as naval trawlers and minelayers. Many Babies were attached to RNAS coastal air stations located in England and Scotland and RNAS stations in Egypt, Greece and Italy.
A major role of the Baby was to intercept German Zeppelin raids as far from Britain as possible, along with tracking German naval movements.
Availability: sold out
Curtiss F6C-4

The Curtiss F6C Hawk was an interwar Navy and Marine Corps single engine, single seat fighter based on the Army’s Curtiss P-6 Hawk. Like the P-6 the early versions of the F6C were powered by a Curtiss V-12 liquid cooled engine. The aircraft was armed with two .30 caliber machine guns and could carry a small bomb load. Due to the aircraft’s sturdy design and construction, the F6C became one of the Navy’s first aircraft capable of dive bombing at a steep angle. A prototype of an updated version of the Hawk, designated F6C-4, was delivered to the Navy in 1927. The Navy had decided that air cooled radials were easier to maintain than liquid cooled inline engines while at sea, so the F6C-4 was designed and built with a Pratt & Whitney R-1340. The Navy ordered thirty-one F6C-4s and assigned them to Fighter Squadron 2 (VF-2B) aboard the USS Lexington. The Navy retired them from front line service in 1930, though the Marine Corps continued to use them until late 1932. Most of the Marine F6C-4s were assigned to Marine Fighter Squadron 10 (VF-10M) at Naval Air Station San Diego.
Availability: sold out
Vought SBU-1 Corsair

The Vought SBU-1 Corsair was a two-seat, all-metal biplane dive bomber built by Vought Aircraft Company of Dallas, Texas for the US Navy. Its design was based upon the F3U-1 two-seat fighter that was abandoned when the Navy decided not to build any more two-seat fighters.
Availability: sold out
De Havilland DH.90 Dragonfly 1:32

De Havilland DH.90 Dragonfly 1:32 scale.
From today we accept preorders - shipping time to 60 days.
Availability: small amount
Dispatched within: 10 working days
DH 89 Dragon Rapide Scottish Airways

Shipping due Coronovirus pandemic.
There may be delays in the delivery of the model.
Availability: small amount
Dispatched within: 10 working days
DH 89 Dragon Rapide

Shipping due Coronovirus pandemic.
There may be delays in the delivery of the model.
Shipping due Coronovirus pandemic.
To the Australia - an economic package, New Zealand still blocked. You can already send priority to most European countries. If in doubt, you can ask for shipping. Remember that money can be returned until shipment.
There may be delays in the delivery of the model - there is always contact with us.
There will be plenty of models - we will do them where there is demand, it may be delayed in time, but they will be.
Availability: small amount
Dispatched within: 10 working days
CURTISS A-3 FALCON

The Curtiss Falcon was a family of military biplane aircraft built by the United States aircraft manufacturer Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company during the 1920s. The A-3 Attack Falcon saw considerable use, in frontline service with the 8th, 13th and 19th Attack Squadrons of the 3rd Attack Group, Barksdale Field, Louisiana, and the 26th Attack Squadron in Hawaii from 1928 to 1934 and with reserve units until 1937.
Availability: sold out