HMHS Britannic model was built near to scale in real units and based on real dimensional information, drawings, photos, and other documents, and with a lot of exterior details. It looks very realistic and renders nicely without any special render software. It is a Ultra High Poly model of nearly 1,000,000 polygons. The model includes all the modifications done to her after the sinking of her sister ship the Titanic, including the additional lifeboats, stowage and cranes used to launch them. The model also includes all the detail of our 3d model of the Titanic related to the ship, bridge, and exterior of the ship. It also has animateable cranes, davits, propellers and rudders. It is presented here in the colors of the military used hospital ship in which she was sank with a great loss of life. Native format is 3ds Max. Model was exported to a wide variety of formats. Other formats are exported in one resolution. This can be further subdivided. Exported formats (3ds, lwo and obj) are prepared well to work correctly with every standard modeling software. Compatibility level with other software’s may be limited. Model is fully textured with all materials UVW mapped and applied. Most materials are planar mapped and major materials include texturing. All textures and materials are included as shown. 3ds Max models are grouped for easy selection, and objects are logically named for ease of scene management. No cleaning up necessary, just drop your models into the scene and start rendering. No special plugin needed to open scene. Previews were rendered using 3dsmax standard scanline. This model was not designed for 3d printing, it is a digital file only.
HMHS Britannic the third and last of the White Star Lines Olympic class ocean liners. She was launched just before the start of World War I and just after the tragedy of her sister ship the Titanic. She was put to sea in 1915 as a hospital ship. She operated as a hospital ship for jus over a year when she was struck by a sea mine which exploded and brought about her sinking 21 November 1916. She sank in 55 minutes and 30 people were killed. 1035 survivors were rescued from the water and life boats. She was the largest vessel serving in the war.