AA29402 Panavia Tornado GR1A ZA371/C, RAF No.II(AC) Sqn
Product Info
Tracing its lineage back to the formation of the Royal Flying Corps at Farnborough in May 1912, No.II(AC) Squadron is the most senior squadron in the current Royal Air Force, also taking the honour of being the first fixed wing aircraft unit to be formed anywhere in the world. The first British unit to cross the Channel to operate in France at the start of the Great War, ‘Shiny Two’ would become specialist in the role of aerial Army cooperation flying, and aerial reconnaissance, something its pilots would perfect throughout its long history. The Unit would serve throughout the Cold War period operating a variety of classic aircraft types, including the Hawker Hunter, McDonnell Douglas Phantom and SEPECAT Jaguar, but would begin an impressive 27 year association with the Panavia Tornado from the end of 1988, only broken when they exchanged their aircraft for Eurofighter Typhoons. During that period, the most strikingly presented Tornados were definitely those which benefitted from a temporary winter camouflage scheme in support of their deployment to Norway on Arctic operations. These combined defence and readiness exercises saw various aircraft types from different nations regularly coming together to test their capabilities in meeting the threat posed by Eastern Bloc forces in the high north of Europe, a show of strength to deter any thoughts of aggression. The GR.1A variant of the Tornado was a dedicated reconnaissance platform, made up of 16 converted GR.1 airframes and 14 newly constructed aircraft.
What's Inside
Tech Specs
- How many pieces will be found in the box opened by the customer?
- 1x Aircraft, 1x Stand
- Item Scale
- 1:48 Scale
- Release type
- New Livery
- Item Length - Without Packaging (cm)
- 33
- Item Height - Without Packaging (cm)
- 12
- Item Width - Without Packaging (cm)
- 29
- Finish
- Painted
- Rotatable Propeller(s)/Rotor(s)
- Yes
A detailed die-cast scale model for adult collector. Not Suitable for children under 14 years.