
Republic P-47D Thunderbolt - Ski-U-Mah 3D Model

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Republic P-47D Thunderbolt - Ski-U-Mah 3D Model
Republic P-47 Thunderbolt Ski-U-Mah - 509th FS - 405th FG - European Theater - 1944
Originally modelled in cinema4D. Detailed enough for close-up renders. The zip-file contains bodypaint textures and standard materials.
Features:
- Alternative Equipment: An additional Rocket-Launcher - Droptank or M65 Bomb
- Inside scene: - model - 24 textures, 2 materials, 1 alphamap
- No cleaning up necessary, just drop your models into the scene and start rendering.
- No special plugin needed to open scene.
- Phong shading interpolation / Smoothing - 35
-The files contains seperate parts for a Flying and a Standing-Version
- NOTE - In obj, lwo and fbx the Alphamap for the propellor (Run_Alpha) in the fly-version must manually load in the Materialcanal / Opacitycanal.
- c4d R11
- Polygones - 151170 Vertices - 105662 - 31 Objects
- 24 textures - 2 materials - 1 alpha-map
- c4d R16
- Polygones - 151170 Vertices - 105662 - 31 Objects
- 24 textures - 2 materials - 1 alpha-map
-- obj File - lwo file - fbx - File Version 2010
The Thunderbolt was the most famous of all the Republic aircraft in WWII. First flown on 6 May 1941, the P-47 was designed as a large, high-performance fighter/bomber, utilizing the large Pratt and Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp engine to give it excellent performance and a large load-carrying capability. The first deliveries of the P-47 took place in June 1942, when the US Army Air Corps began flying it in the European Theater.
Later in the war, Jugs served as escort fighters for B-29 bombers in the Pacific. Mostly, though, they excelled in the ground-attack role, strafing and bombing their way across the battlefields of Europe. Early versions of the P-47 had 'razorback' fuselages, but later models (beginning near the middle of the P-47 production run) featured a bubble canopy which gave the pilot increased rearward visibility.
Originally modelled in cinema4D. Detailed enough for close-up renders. The zip-file contains bodypaint textures and standard materials.
Features:
- Alternative Equipment: An additional Rocket-Launcher - Droptank or M65 Bomb
- Inside scene: - model - 24 textures, 2 materials, 1 alphamap
- No cleaning up necessary, just drop your models into the scene and start rendering.
- No special plugin needed to open scene.
- Phong shading interpolation / Smoothing - 35
-The files contains seperate parts for a Flying and a Standing-Version
- NOTE - In obj, lwo and fbx the Alphamap for the propellor (Run_Alpha) in the fly-version must manually load in the Materialcanal / Opacitycanal.
- c4d R11
- Polygones - 151170 Vertices - 105662 - 31 Objects
- 24 textures - 2 materials - 1 alpha-map
- c4d R16
- Polygones - 151170 Vertices - 105662 - 31 Objects
- 24 textures - 2 materials - 1 alpha-map
-- obj File - lwo file - fbx - File Version 2010
The Thunderbolt was the most famous of all the Republic aircraft in WWII. First flown on 6 May 1941, the P-47 was designed as a large, high-performance fighter/bomber, utilizing the large Pratt and Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp engine to give it excellent performance and a large load-carrying capability. The first deliveries of the P-47 took place in June 1942, when the US Army Air Corps began flying it in the European Theater.
Later in the war, Jugs served as escort fighters for B-29 bombers in the Pacific. Mostly, though, they excelled in the ground-attack role, strafing and bombing their way across the battlefields of Europe. Early versions of the P-47 had 'razorback' fuselages, but later models (beginning near the middle of the P-47 production run) featured a bubble canopy which gave the pilot increased rearward visibility.