Difference between revisions of "Horseman"
(Created page with 'The Horseman was the Foundation's first attempt at a long-range bomber, and was the predeccessor to the Harpy. Horsemans were produced begining in A.Y. 5701 and officiall…') |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The Horseman was the Foundation's first attempt at a long-range bomber, and was the predeccessor to the [[Harpy]]. Horsemans were produced begining in [[A.Y.]] 5701 and officially retired in A.Y. 620, a period of 319 years. | The Horseman was the Foundation's first attempt at a long-range bomber, and was the predeccessor to the [[Harpy]]. Horsemans were produced begining in [[A.Y.]] 5701 and officially retired in A.Y. 620, a period of 319 years. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In a rare move, design and production of the Horseman was contracted to an outside firm, making it one of the very few fighters not designed, tested, and built entirely in [[Gudersnipe]]-owned facilities. | ||
Despite a long production record, few Horseman were actually produced, and even fewer deployed into active combat. The Horseman was deemed to slow and unmanuverable to survive in high or even medium-threat environments. | Despite a long production record, few Horseman were actually produced, and even fewer deployed into active combat. The Horseman was deemed to slow and unmanuverable to survive in high or even medium-threat environments. |
Revision as of 07:48, 31 August 2010
The Horseman was the Foundation's first attempt at a long-range bomber, and was the predeccessor to the Harpy. Horsemans were produced begining in A.Y. 5701 and officially retired in A.Y. 620, a period of 319 years.
In a rare move, design and production of the Horseman was contracted to an outside firm, making it one of the very few fighters not designed, tested, and built entirely in Gudersnipe-owned facilities.
Despite a long production record, few Horseman were actually produced, and even fewer deployed into active combat. The Horseman was deemed to slow and unmanuverable to survive in high or even medium-threat environments.
Though officially cast as a 40PSL+ fighter, the Horseman could barely reach 38, and not within the alloted time of the acceleration curve test.
Following retirment from active service, most Horseman bombers were scrapped, with only a handful saved for use in museums.
The Horseman's legacy was in proving the need for a long-range bomber, though it failed to fill that roll.