History

The Lockheed L-100 is a civil version of the famous C-130 Hercules.

They were introduced to service in 1965 and many remain in service today with civilian and military operators.

In the early 1960s Lockheed decided to produced a commercial variant of its C-130 based on a demilitarised C-130E.

The prototype first flew on 20 April 1964 and the first one entered service in September 1965.

Due to slow sales two new, longer versions were created – the L-100-20 stretched by 2.52 metres and the L-100-30 stretched by an additional 2.03 metres.

They were larger and more economical than the first version.

Deliveries totalled 114 aircraft with production ending in 1992.

By 2009 36 L-100s remained in civil operation and 35 in military service.

Saturn Airways was a charter airline that started service in 1949 and was absorbed by Trans International Airlines in 1976.

This model represents a L-100-30 flown by Saturn Airways in the early 1970s.

Welsh Models 1/144 kit completed by Leigh Edmonds in April 2010.

Data

MODEL: Lockheed L-100-30 (Saturn Airways, N10ST, early 1970s)

ROLE: Cargo Aircraft

TIME PERIOD: 1964-

ENGINES: four Allison 501-D22A turboprops of 3360kW each

WING SPAN: 40.40m

LENGTH: 34.35m

MAXIMUM TAKE OFF WEIGHT: 155,000kg

MAXIMUM SPEED: 570km/h

RANGE: 2470km

PAYLOAD: 23,150kg

CREW: 3-4

SCALE: 1/144

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