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Description
Arado Ar-583s heavy fighters attack American bombers, using their X-4 missiles, during late September 1946.
The Arado E.583 was a project design from 1945 for a jet-powered fighter aircraft of the Arado Flugzeugwerke. The design of the E.583 goes back to the E.581, an earlier project by Arado, in which design variants for a single-beam, tailless fighter were also examined. Under the overall designation E.583, the studies Ar-I and Ar-II - also referred to as Project I and II - were presented at the same time. A third variant received smaller and more swept wings. Allegedly, it is said to have served as inspiration for the US Vought F7U-3 Cutlass.
Created with Cinema4D, rendered with Maxwell,PP with Photoshop. The 3D model of this will soon be available on my usual platform, as well as prints of this illustration. Stay tuned!
The Arado E.583 was a project design from 1945 for a jet-powered fighter aircraft of the Arado Flugzeugwerke. The design of the E.583 goes back to the E.581, an earlier project by Arado, in which design variants for a single-beam, tailless fighter were also examined. Under the overall designation E.583, the studies Ar-I and Ar-II - also referred to as Project I and II - were presented at the same time. A third variant received smaller and more swept wings. Allegedly, it is said to have served as inspiration for the US Vought F7U-3 Cutlass.
Created with Cinema4D, rendered with Maxwell,PP with Photoshop. The 3D model of this will soon be available on my usual platform, as well as prints of this illustration. Stay tuned!
Image size
1920x1080px 1.24 MB
Comments45
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Freakin’ INCREDIBLE!! The Germans had all kinds of insane aircraft on the drawing boards late in the war (as if I’m telling you something that you didn’t already know) If the war had lasted another year or two longer, the Allies would’ve had a MUCH harder time maintaining control of the skies! On a similar note, are you at all familiar with Ted Nomura’s Comic Book series “Luftwaffe 1946”? Although the people aren’t drawn too great (more in the style of Manga”) he does a decent job on the aircraft, tells an “alternative history” of WWII, which lasts thru 1946 (as well as in his reimagining, females are allowed to serve in the military) it’s pretty interesting and fun… Anyway, thanks again for all of your BRILLIANT artwork! Hugh