TURKEY VULTURE plan, 64" wing span slope soarer
This is a high resolution TIFF file and PDF file containing 200 x 200 dots per inch.
Either file will print a plan 36" x 58"
HOW COOL! Give your buddies the Bird
This is a plan for an RC Turkey Vulture with a 64" wing span and a length of just 24 inches. Da bird may be towed or would make a neat look'en slope soarer, ready to sloop down and feast on the tasty remains of a stinking ARF who was deceased on impact,,,,, YUM YUM. Finger licken good! The Magazine article is included.
Arn't you tire of building the same old crap?
Why not go out on a limb and build some thing new?
You already know that if your flying buddies where eagles, none of them could fly.
There so full of "it",,, that none of them could never get off the ground! ha ha
File $5.00
Peashooter 61" wing span Stunter
WOW, she is BIG too with a 61" wing span. I calculated the wing area to be approximately 720 sq. inches and the power is a .35 to .45 two stroke.... ..... Notice the well drawn windshield pattern & that you build your own cowl..... Yeeehaaaaa,,, clean and simple, well drawn fun scale plans. What more could you ever ask for? ,,,, OK, beside that.

HISTORY: The all-metal, single-wing P-26, popularly known as the "Peashooter," was an entirely new design for Boeing, and its structure drew heavily on the Monomail. The Peashooter's wings were braced with wire, rather than with the rigid struts used on other airplanes, so the airplane was lighter and had less drag. ...... Because the P-26 flew 27 mph faster and out climbed biplane fighters, the Army ordered 136 production-model Peashooters. Acclaimed by pilots for its speed and maneuverability, the small but feisty P-26 formed the core of pursuit squadrons throughout the United States. ..... Twelve export versions, 11 for China and one for Spain, were built. One of a group of P-26s, turned over to the Philippine Army late in 1941, was among the first Allied fighters to down a Japanese airplane. ...... Funds to buy the export version of the Peashooter were partly raised by Chinese Americans. Contribution boxes were placed on the counters of Chinese restaurants. .......... The Boeing P-26A was the first all-metal monoplane fighter (pursuit plane) produced in quantity for the U.S. Army Air Corps, affectionately called the Peashooter by its pilots. It was also the last Army Air Corps pursuit aircraft accepted with an open cockpit, a fixed undercarriage, and an externally braced wing.
This is a high resolution TIFF file containing 200 x 200 dots per inch.
The file will print a plan 36" x 43
File $5.00
You could easly convert this Jewel to RC
To print the plans at home; open the TIFF file with Paint (which is included in all recent versions of Microsoft Windows) you can print the full size image on small printers. Once you have the file opened with Paint, go into page setup and tell it no centering, 0 margins and 100% size. Then, when you print it, it will be divided up into as many individual sheets as necessary to hold the full size image. These sheets can then be fastened together to make one big sheet. I strongly suggest useing "glue sticks" found at any store to fasten the sheets together.
Mark III Kwik-Fli by Phil Kraft
The Kwik-Fli comes in two different wing spans.
File $5.00

What, no canopy! Sacrebleu,,, And your prop?
File $5.00
Betty Page
Oh how she reminded the men on my fathers sub just what they were fighting for while they patrolled the South Pacific.

Say girl, let me hold that up for you,
ooops,,, I lost my grip. <Grin Grin>
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