Handley Page Victor Development & Projects

Rapidograph - Single 'Ought' (Gray band) tip for inking. Sometimes on photostated line art (had to have a light touch - sometimes the pen tip would dig into the emulsion which was pretty soft.)

And 85 line screen 35% Zip-a-tone sheets (and AMS Scrub). (With a sharp X-Acto number 11 blade.)

And shipfitter's curves. Because flexicurves were a little weird - there was a little 'give' when you released it and it didn't quite hold the curve.

Oh - and waxing vellums to the layout/pasteup board.

Rubylith and Amberlith.

And those very special blue pens and markers.

(memoirs of a former ink-stained wretch)
 
Sort of - defined as "A strip of flexible material that can be used for drawing curves, measuring posture, etc. " Unsually a bendable metal core with a plastic exterior. Think of it as a spline that would [mostly] hold its shape without the ducks.
 
Sort of - defined as "A strip of flexible material that can be used for drawing curves, measuring posture, etc. " Unsually a bendable metal core with a plastic exterior. Think of it as a spline that would [mostly] hold its shape without the ducks.
 
ref. 'Skybolt, at arms length', Nicholas Hill, Fonthill Media, 2019 (page 156)

an excellent volume which also includes further drawings of the proposed HP. Victor Skybolt 2, 4 & 6x installations as well as other UK. ALBM. studies (also a useful adjunct to Chris Gibson's 'Vulcan's Hammer' volume) :)
 

Attachments

  • 20191212_172641.jpg
    20191212_172641.jpg
    2 MB · Views: 259
Last edited:
Apologies folks, seen a lot of these and the number of fantasy pictures is huge. Quite sad really
 
From Aeroplane monthly 2009/7.
 

Attachments

  • 1.png
    1.png
    238.6 KB · Views: 239
I'm a bit puzzled by them referring to it as the 'last Victor'. Cosford has one, there's one at York, and Wikipedia mentions a third at Bruntingthorpe. I suppose they mean it's the last B.1 as the others are tankers...
 

Similar threads

Back
Top Bottom