: The stretched version of the 727, which could accommodate up to 189 passengers.

The Boeing 727 was the backbone of the Braniff International fleet during the 1960s and 70s. While most airlines of the era used drab, utilitarian designs, Braniff revolutionized aviation branding with its "End of the Plain Plane" campaign.

: Refers to the 1:100 scale , meaning the model is 1/100th the size of the actual aircraft.

: Stands for "Recolor Corrected," suggesting this is a revised version of a previous file with fixed colors or textures. The Legacy of the "Flying Colors"

The long, technical file name describes exactly what is inside the compressed .rar archive:

: The "Blue" livery mentioned in the file likely represents one of several shades used by Braniff, such as Mercury Blue or the two-tone Blue over Light Blue . These colors were part of the "Flying Colors" and "Ultra" schemes designed to make the airline's name familiar worldwide through an "imaginative approach to marketing".