The 747-200F had always been an amazing aircraft. Gary Hunter made a perfect simulation of this amazing bird, it came as a package, 747-200F, 747-100 JT9D and the SuperTanker. It has about a ton of liveries. Wing detail is excellent, no doubt. I especially love the krueger flaps, and the antenna sticking out the trailing edge of the wing. The hump is modelled brilliantly. The panel looks very much like the real 747 classics, the color is spot on and the systems are all custom made, despite not all the buttons are. The MCP is very nice, certainly put a lot of effort into making that. The NAV SOURCE selector and the unique roll and pitch mode selectors are one-of-a-kind, in exact specification to the 747-200s. The flightmodel is it's real strong point, the old 747 freighters really did not want to climb, after a flaps 10 takeoff, my climb rate was 2000 feet/min. After the thrust reduction, holy cow! It dropped to 1000 feet/min. At 25,000, I switched from FL CH to V/S, and I was climbing at 600 ft/min. Landing was also a handful, you really have to concentrate on nailing the speeds and flaps because the 747-200 had an ultra slow reacting autopilot. Remember to never turn off artificial stability, otherwise you will end up pitching all over the place on final. At 500 feet, I reduced my speed to the final VREF of 146 knots and disengaged the autopilot with the art stab ON. I flown the bird down with small and smooth inputs, at 20 feet I flared and at 10, I very slowly brought the thrust down and just as I closed the throttles, the bird's main gears kissed the ground. The 747-100 was nearly the same, but certainly not as heavy, as it is a pax version. There are some tips for flying this aircraft: The flightmodel is VERY realistic, therefore if you cut the throttles too fast on the flare, you will have a slight pitch down tendency. Boeing stresses that the best landing is when you are just about to touch down, your throttles close. The N1 at VREF with full flaps 30 is 71%, which is much higher than your typical 737, because simply the flaps are so massive, it needed it. It did not have winglets like the 747-400 did, therefore more induced drag. When you close the throttles, be ready to apply a bit of aft pressure to compensate on the gained rate-of-descent. It has no GPS, it is a very primitive INS operated with the x-plane default FMS. Pros: Amazingly accurate flight model Very well done panel No frame rate loss at all Very well modelled 3D model Cheap Cons: Some sloppy bits of the cockpit no 3D cockpit The pros outweigh the cons, this is a must get for any 747 lover.