This huge aircraft made its first flight in April 1944 and was rather a flying ship than a boat, bigger than the BV-222, and was the heaviest aircraft of WWII. The Spruce Goose with eight engines was even much bigger but she was built at the end of the war and never did a real flight except a test taxiing with a short moment of being airborne. Only one BV-238 performed successful flights, the two other prototypes were never completed. The FS-model shows the heavy armed planned long range bomber version, which was never completed. It comes with two paint schemes: winter and green.
The BV238 is a gentle giant. She takes off smoothly, even with full load. Cutting the engines, you enter a gentle descent with a pitch down nose attitude. Just push your joystick up and she lands quietly at the right angle. You can program the autopilot using a historical German flight director (You can only mark your direction, no altitude control). The spoiler key opens your port and starboard floats.
Many THANKS to Erwin Welker, for the original model, and MaverickCFS2, who did a terrific job converting the model to CFS2.
Discussion Thread
The BV238 is a gentle giant. She takes off smoothly, even with full load. Cutting the engines, you enter a gentle descent with a pitch down nose attitude. Just push your joystick up and she lands quietly at the right angle. You can program the autopilot using a historical German flight director (You can only mark your direction, no altitude control). The spoiler key opens your port and starboard floats.
Many THANKS to Erwin Welker, for the original model, and MaverickCFS2, who did a terrific job converting the model to CFS2.
Discussion Thread