Three Locations. One Historic Bundle.
From a Spitfire base above Devon's coast to the only British soil occupied by Nazi Germany — fly the Channel that defined the Second World War. Three hand-crafted scenery addons, one discounted package.
"The Channel was not just water. It was the front line —
Defended from Devon, patrolled from Scilly, steadfast until D-Day dawned."
— The story behind the bundle
Present-day airports and airfields whose wartime past runs deep. Every location fully hand-crafted for MSFS.
Perched above the cliffs at Salcombe, Bolt Head was an active RAF base during WWII — Spitfires flew from this very strip on air-sea rescue missions over the English Channel. Today it's a private grass airfield, faithfully recreated in extraordinary detail. Your starting point.
Britain's most remote inhabited archipelago. During WWII, RAF Coastal Command flew anti-submarine patrols from here across the Western Approaches — the waters where the Battle of the Atlantic was decided. Fly the islands in unprecedented detail, from St Mary's Airport to the Wolf Rock Lighthouse.
The only British territory occupied by Nazi Germany — for five years, from 1940 to 1945. Guernsey was liberated one day after VE Day. Landing here is the final leg of this Channel journey. A highly detailed recreation of EGJB with custom buildings, accurate ground layout and dynamic lighting.
This repaint for the Flying Iron Spitfire represents 41 Squadron's MB882 — an aircraft flown by Flt Lt Peter Graham from Bolt Head Airfield in 1944. Recreating it offers a small glimpse into the world these pilots knew during a very demanding chapter of the war.
Bolt Head was a quiet-looking place, set on the cliffs of South Devon, but during WWII it carried a responsibility far outweighing its size. As a satellite of RAF Exeter, the airfield supported fighter operations watching over the south coast and the shipping lanes of the Channel. Pilots faced short-notice scrambles, heading out low over the water to intercept threats or protect returning aircraft — rough weather, unpredictable visibility, and a constant workload.
The Spitfire Mk XII was well suited to this flying. Its Griffon engine gave strong low-altitude performance and quick acceleration — something pilots valued when they needed to be airborne with little warning. MB882 would have seen this work regularly, and imagining Flt Lt Graham taking off from Bolt Head in 1944 adds a layer of character that goes beyond markings and paint.
Three locations that form a single unforgettable journey — history woven into every waypoint.
Climb out over the cliffs where Spitfires once scrambled to cover Channel crossings. Salcombe Estuary beneath you, the open sea ahead. Head south-west toward Scilly.
Land at St Mary's, explore the archipelago. These were the last British islands seen by Allied aircrew departing on Atlantic patrols. Circle the Wolf Rock Lighthouse before pushing south-east toward the Channel Islands.
Cross the Channel and touch down on the island that spent five years under Nazi occupation. Flying into EGJB today, you land where liberating forces arrived in May 1945. The end of the route. The end of the story.
Every addon built from real-world site visits, aerial photography and ground survey — not just satellite imagery.
Ultra-high resolution materials that look spectacular at any altitude, in any lighting condition.
Stunning visuals without punishing your frame rate. Carefully managed LOD and draw call budgets throughout.
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