Officially designated FAST Pack V2.1, the S-FAST Pack consisted of the standard pair of dorsal rocket boosters plus the pallets with additional maneuvering jets, sensors and weapons. The S-FAST pack added another pair of P&W+EF-2001 boosters under the inner wings, having the duty to give to fighter the power necessary to exit easily from the gravity of moons or little planets without atmosphere, and improve acceleration during combat situations. Range was also further extended, together with additional life support systems for prolonged deep space operations, or the case of emergency.
In order to accept the S-FAST pack and exploit its potential, the VF-1’s wings and inner wing attachment points had to be strengthened due to the additional load and propulsion. The use of the S-FAST pack also precluded the fighter from transforming into Battroid or Gerwalk mode – the underwing packs had to be jettisoned beforehand. The other standard FAST Pack 2.0 elements could still be carried, though.
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
The modfied Valkyries capable of accepting the S-FAST Pack received an additional “S” to their type designation – more than 100 VF-1s were converted or built in this deep space configuration until late 2011. Initial deployment of the S-FAST Pack was conducted through SVF-24 “Moon Shadows” in early 2010, a unit that was quickly disbanded, though, but re-formed as SVF-124 “Moon Shooters”, tasked with the defense of the lunar Apollo Base and several special missions.
After the end of Space War I, the VF-1 continued to be manufactured both in the Sol system and throughout the UNG space colonies. Although the VF-1 would eventually be replaced as the primary Variable Fighter of the U.N. Spacy by the more capable, but also much bigger, VF-4 Lightning III in 2020, a long service record and continued production after the war proved the lasting worth of the design.
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
The VF-1 was without doubt the most recognizable variable fighter of Space War I and was seen as a vibrant symbol of the U.N. Spacy even into the first year of the New Era 0001 in 2013. At the end of 2015 the final rollout of the VF-1 was celebrated at a special ceremony, commemorating this most famous of variable fighters. The VF-1 Valkryie was built from 2006 to 2013 with a total production of 5,459 VF-1 variable fighters with several variants (VF-1A = 5,093, VF-1D = 85, VF-1J = 49, VF-1S = 30, VF-1G = 12, VE-1 = 122, VT-1 = 68).
However, the fighter remained active in many second line units and continued to show its worthiness years later, e. g. through Milia Jenius who would use her old VF-1 fighter in defense of the colonization fleet - 35 years after the type's service introduction!
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr[/i]
General characteristics:All-environment variable fighter and tactical combat Battroid,
used by U.N. Spacy, U.N. Navy, U.N. Space Air Force
Accommodation:Pilot only in Marty & Beck Mk-7 zero/zero ejection seat
Dimensions:Fighter Mode:
Length 14.23 meters
Wingspan 14.78 meters (at 20° minimum sweep)
Height 3.84 meters
Battroid Mode:
Height 12.68 meters
Width 7.3 meters
Length 4.0 meters
Empty weight: 13.25 metric tons;
Standard T-O mass: 18.5 metric tons;
MTOW: 37.0 metric tons
Power Plant: 2x Shinnakasu Heavy Industry/P&W/Roice FF-2001 thermonuclear reaction turbine engines, output 650 MW each, rated at 11,500 kg in standard or in overboost (225.63 kN x 2)
4 x Shinnakasu Heavy Industry NBS-1 high-thrust vernier thrusters (1 x counter reverse vernier thruster nozzle mounted on the side of each leg nacelle/air intake, 1 x wing thruster roll control system on each wingtip);
18 x P&W LHP04 low-thrust vernier thrusters beneath multipurpose hook/handles
The S-FAST Pack added 4x P&W+EF-2001 booster thrusters with 120.000 kg each, plus a total of 28x P&W LHP04 low-thrust vernier thrusters
Performance:Battroid Mode: maximum walking speed 160 km/h
Fighter Mode: at 10,000 m Mach 2.71; at 30,000+ m Mach 3.87
g limit: in space +7
Thrust-to-weight ratio: empty 3.47; standard T-O 2.49; maximum T-O 1.24
Design Features:3-mode variable transformation; variable geometry wing; vertical take-off and landing; control-configurable vehicle; single-axis thrust vectoring; three "magic hand" manipulators for maintenance use; retractable canopy shield for Battroid mode and atmospheric reentry; option of GBP-1S system, atmospheric-escape booster, or FAST Pack system
Transformation:Standard time from Fighter to Battroid (automated): under 5 sec.
Min. time from Fighter to Battroid (manual): 0.9 sec.
Armament:2x internal Mauler RÖV-20 anti-aircraft laser cannon, firing 6,000 pulses per minute
1x Howard GU-11 55 mm three-barrel Gatling gun pod with 200 RPG, fired at 1,200 rds/min
4x underwing hard points for a wide variety of ordnance, including
12x AMM-1 hybrid guided multipurpose missiles (3/point), or
12x MK-82 LDGB conventional bombs (3/point), or
6x RMS-1 large anti-ship reaction missiles (2/outboard point, 1/inboard point), or
4x UUM-7 micro-missile pods (1/point) each carrying 15 x Bifors HMM-01 micro-missiles,
or a combination of above load-outs
The optional Shinnakasu Heavy Industry S-FAST Pack 2.1 augmentative space weapon system added:
6x micro-missiles in two NP-AR-01 micro-missile launcher pods (mounted rear-ward under center ventral section in Fighter mode or on lower arm sections in GERWALK/Battroid mode)
4x12 micro missiles in four HMMP-02 micro-missile launchers, one inside each booster pod
...und zum Schluss noch einmal das Modell (ca. 14cm lang/breit) "wie gebaut":
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
1:100 Stonewell/Bellcom VF-1JS ‘Super Valkyrie’; aircraft ‘MA 200’, personal mount of Flight Leader Lt. Com. Catherine Hojo of the U.N. Spacy SVF-124 ‘Moon Shooters’ fighter squadron; ‘Apollo’ Lunar Base, early 2012 (ARII kit conversion) by
dizzyfugu, on Flickr
Ziemlich episches Projekt - und was mir sehr daran gefällt ist, dass diese VF-1 sehr "echt" herüberkommt - wie eben eine eher unglamouröse Einsatzmaschine aus den letzten Zügen des First Space War gegen die Zentraedi, trotz der massiven Auswüchse und Anhänge. Ist besser und auch stimmger geworden, als ich je gedacht hätte!