FSX Douglas XB-19

The Douglas XB-19 which first flew in June, 1941, was the largest airplane built before the B-36. It had a wing span of 212 feet. It was originally powered by 4 Wright 3350 Cyclones with which it achieved a cruise speed of 135 mph. It was stationed at Wright Field in Ohio toward the end of WW2. I lived in Columbus, just down the road, so I actually saw this monster in the air a few times. It had been converted to the XB-19A by then so it was powered with more powerful Allison engines. What I remember was how slow it seemed to fly and that it took the entire city of Columbus to complete a turn.
This is a native FSX Acceleration project. It has reflective .dds textures, reflective glass and the normal animations including cowl flaps. The flight deck was very large so I added a camera definition inside it, originally pointed aft at the flight engineer's station. The VC has animated flight controls and working gauges. The flight engineer's station also has working gauges. The sound file was originally created by Lawdog and enhanced by Obio and obtained from the Sim-Outhouse Archive.
The XB-19 was a very large, heavy airplane that was very under powered by todays standards. It rotates for take off at about 95 - 100 knots and uses about 9000 feet of runway to get there. It is definitely not a bush plane.

INSTALLATION: Unzip XB19.zip into a temporary folder. Copy the folder called Douglas XB-19 into the Airplanes folder of FSX. Open the gauges folder and copy the two files into the Gauges folder of FSX. That's all.

LEGAL: This project is released as freeware. You may repaint it, make panel modifications and upload to this or another website as long you give me credit for the original design. You need my written permission to use any of these files for commercial purposes. Be advised this project will be uploaded by me to www.SurClaro and www.simviation.com. If you find it and download from another site, I am not responsible for the integrity of the files.
This airplane should not hurt your computer but I am not responsible if you think it causes problems.


Enjoy! P. Clawson


Email: p.pandj@verizon.net