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Academy of Model Aeronautics Model Aviation Magazine - Airplanes and Rockets

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Sailing Robots Hunt Hurricanes

Sailing Robots Hunt Hurricanes - Airplanes and Rockets"The boats, just over a meter long and called C-Stars, will gather meteorological and oceanographic data for hurricane research and forecasting. 'Understanding weather conditions where the ocean surface meets the lower atmosphere is key to predicting hurricane intensity,' said NOAA oceanographer Greg Foltz. 'If these miniature uncrewed surface vehicles prove reliable, they could become a critical piece of NOAA's hurricane observing system in the future.' The five C-Stars were set loose off the island of St Thomas in the British Virgins Islands, and are receiving instructions from NOAA and the University of Southern Mississippi via Oshen's..."

How to Stunt Rudder-Only

How to Stunt Rudder-Only, May 1964 R/C Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsNot all that long ago, my interpretation of radio-controlled (R/C) rudder-only (RO) flying was that the airplane operated from a single channel controlling the rudder. That is the way it began, I suppose, but as aerobatic competition entered the picture, it expanded to include throttle control on the engine. Some models, I believe might have also had elevators and/or aileron control, but during competition flights, only the engine throttle and rudder were allowed to be manipulated. I have flown many R/C airplanes with just two channels - rudder and elevator - but never with rudder and engine throttle. In fact, the only airplane I have ever flown with only rudder control is an experimental rubber-powered job with an electromagnet coil and a permanent magnet on the rudder. Many magazine articles...

Dr. Wernher von Braun Answers Questions About Space

Dr. Wernher von Braun Answers Your Questions About Space, January 1963 Popular Science - RF CafeFormer Nazi Germany's famed rocket scientist Dr. Wernher von Braun's 1963 Popular Science magazine column answers questions submitted by reader representing the overwhelming public interest in space science, which motivated his monthly contributions to share complex topics accessibly. He explains that steering large rockets involves deflecting exhaust thrust via swiveling nozzles or jet vanes, contrasting liquid and solid propellant methods. Astronauts exit pressurized cabins using airlocks, depressurizing the compartment before venturing into space. Liquid hydrogen's efficiency as fuel stems from its high energy release and low molecular weight, yielding superior exhaust velocity. Von Braun also touches on the moon's likely sterility, solar flares' hazards to manned missions, and the sun’s volatile activity, emphasizing space science’s interdisciplinary and dynamic nature. This is the first of two articles submitted...

Review of Russian Airpower

Review of Russian Airpower, February 1942 Flying Aces - Airplanes and RocketsAircraft historians might find the information from this 1942 edition of Flying Aces magazine useful. As has long been the case on many Russian airplanes and helicopters, the basic outlines - and often even the details - are recognizable from the original versions designed by the United States, England, and Germany. The Russkies have been short on design and test capabilities and long on materials, manpower, and espionage agents. It wouldn't be so bad if the copying was not so obvious. Even their attempt at a space shuttle was a carbon copy of ours. If not for their leaders' commitment to Communism and Socialism, Russia could be...

Well House Replacement Project

Well House Replacement Project - Airplanes and RocketsMy daughter and her husband bought an 11-acre chunk of a small, retired dairy farm in North Carolina a few years ago. Their property included all of the original buildings, including the house, a large workshop, farm equipment shed row, milking stalls, milk processing area, hay storage, a chicken house, and a few other structures. Nearly everything is at least 50 years old - and it shows. There are two active wells on the property - one next to the house, and another in a field next to a utility building. They are independent, but there is a pipe connecting the two systems, with a valve in between to isolate them if necessary. The photo/drawing to the right shows, schematically, what we believe, based on testing, to be the water line layout. The valve was originally open, and then one day there was no water service. With two pumps in parallel, if one pump fails the other will supply sufficient water for all needs in what is now a domestic setting...

Jeep Patriot Exhaust Manifold Replacement

2011 Jeep Patriot 2.4L Engine Exhaust Manifold Replacement - Airplanes and RocketsI have the great misfortune of being a 2011 Jeep Patriot owner with the welded steel combination exhaust manifold and catalytic converter that forms heat stress cracks, resulting in loud noise levels in the passenger cabin. Whilst out driving one day recently, I noticed the sound level increased significantly, but not at all speeds. After a lot of testing and researching on the Internet, I concluded it had to be either a bad muffler, a loose baffle in the catalytic converter, or a crack in the exhaust manifold. It sure sounded like it was coming from the engine area, but I figured at 102,000 miles, it wouldn't hurt to try replacing the muffler first. No such luck. I had a new muffler and the same old noise. Upon removing the upper heat shield from the exhaust manifold, I could immediately see two crack lines in the steel...

The Stanzels of Schulenburg

The Stanzels of Schulenburg, January 1961 American Modeler Magazine - Airplanes and RocketsA couple years ago I posted an article about the Victor Stanzel ElectroMic "Copter" Tethered Helicopter that I had bought on eBay. It was just like the one I had as a pre-teen in the 1960's. If memory serves me correctly, I also had one of the ElectroMic Flash Tethered Airplanes as well. Someday I'll probably buy one of those on eBay. The webpage hyperlinked above has a video embedded that tells the story of the Stanzel Brothers' Model Airplane Museum. You will be amazed at all the types of models they produced - powered airplanes, gliders, helicopters, flying saucers. They were a couple of the earliest pioneers in manufacturing ready...

Vintage Gooseneck Lamp Restoration

Vintage Gooseneck Lamp Restoration - Airplanes and RocketsWhile perusing the local Goodwill store, Melanie and I happened upon this old gooseneck lamp. Unlike most of the newer models found in places like Walmart, this one is made of heavy stamped steel, and the gooseneck part is very sturdy with no plastic. When you bend this lamp into position, it stays exactly where you put it without reflexing back a little. It was just what Melanie needed for use on her sewing table, so we bought it as a fixer-upper. As can be seen in the photos, the original condition was useable, but not...

Shoe Rack Project

Shoe Rack Project - Airplanes and RocketsOur one-car garage does not have a lot of extra space in it, especially considering it also holds a riding lawn mower, a snow blower, a backup power generator, and various and sundry yard and car tools. That doesn't leave much room for the assortment of shoes and boots needed by Melanie and me. We had been using a stack of cinder blocks to stuff shoes in, but they looked rather crude and the holes were not really big enough to allow the shoes to be fully enclosed. After completing building a set of stairs into the basement, there were end pieces of the stair treads left over that were just the right width to fit into the space where the cinder blocks used to be stacked. 2x3 framing lumber...

Lockheed Aircraft Corporation

Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, March 23, 1942 Life - RF CafeDuring World War II, many companies who manufactured products for the military bought advertising space in popular household magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, Ladies' Home Journal, Popular Mechanics, Better Homes & Gardens, Good Housekeeping, and, as shown here Life. In this instance, Lockheed Aircraft Corporation (before merging with Martin Aircraft in 1995) ran a two-pager in 1942, near the beginning of official U.S. involvement following the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, featuring its line of both commercial and military aircraft. The U.S. government commandeered many companies' manufacturing facilities to mandate conversion to wartime products. It happened across a wide swath of industries including aircraft, automotive...

Engine Idling Secrets

Engine Idling Secrets, December 1962 American Modeler Magazine - Airplanes and RocketsPrior to the widespread use of mufflers on radio controlled model aircraft engines, exhaust dampers were installed that worked in unison with the throttle. They were oblong or butterfly-shaped flat pieces of metal that pivoted in the center and were connected via a short pushrod to the carburetor's throttle arm. At full throttle, the damper was straight up and down to block the exhaust port as little as possible. At idle, the damper usually totally blocked off the exhaust port; of course some exhaust was still able to exit or the engine would choke out and stop running. The first R/C engines I used in the 1970's came with exhaust dampers...

Anduril Reveals Autonomous Fury Fighter Jet

Anduril Reveals Autonomous Fury Fighter Jet - Airplanes and Rockets"Anduril Industries recently unveiled its collaborative combat aircraft, or CCA, when CEO and co-founder Brian Schimpf took a journalist into the hangar to show off the company's new Fury, an unmanned autonomous CCA. It was the first time any media outlet was permitted to view the aircraft up close. As a CCA, the Fury is designed to work in coordination with manned aircraft. Anduril developed the Fury to sense and understand everything that is happening in the airspace, and as it flies out ahead of a manned aircraft, its job is to react to protect the pilot flying in trail. Schimpf said, 'The first thing you notice about this plane is that there's no cockpit. There is no seat. There's no controls..."

Maple Picture Frame with Crewel Needlework

Maple Picture Frame with Crewel Needlework - Airplanes and RocketsAfter just 33 years, this crewel picture that Melanie stitched is complete and has a custom frame. If memory serves correctly, we bought the crewel kit at a Ben Franklin store in Severna Park, Maryland, in 1985 while living in Arnold, Maryland. She started it shortly after getting it, and then it was put away until last year, 2017, when she decided to complete the project. Most, if not all, of the needlework pictures Melanie has done over the years have been placed in custom frames made by me. I've used pine, oak, teak, hickory, mahogany, and now maple for this frame. The maple wood...

Will Mariner Solve These Mysteries of Venus?

Venera 9, 10, 13, 14 Venus Surface Images - Airplanes and RocketsPer this 1962 Popular Science magazine article, while awaiting Mariner 2's historic sweep past the cloud-shrouded planet of Venus, experts of imagined Earth's nearest neighbor alternately as a lush prehistoric swamp-world, a dust-choked desert, an endless steamy ocean, or a tar-lake Hades reeking with oily smog. What they knew for sure: Venus, a near-twin to Earth in size and gravity, shows only a bright, lemon-yellow veil when viewed through telescopes. Spectrograms pushed earlier revealed thick carbon-dioxide and a wisp of water vapor, but no firm answers about rotation speed or surface material. Then came shocking new microwave temperature data -600 °F surface heat, day and night. It would be 1975 until the USSR's Venera 9 spacecraft landed on the surface and radioed back the first images...

Hobby People Ad, March 1970, American Aircraft Modeler

Hobby People Ad, March 1970, American Aircraft Modeler - Airplanes and Rockets

This particular Hobby People advertisement is from page 53 of the March 1970 issue of American Aircraft Modeler magazine. Hobby People was probably the first company that I ever did mail order from to get airplane supplies. Hobby People is no longer in operation. All copyrights (if any) are hereby acknowledged. Use the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' inflation calculator to see what items cost in today's dollars. For instance, that $3.99 "Cox .049 Babe Bee" engine would be $26.16 in 2018 money. The "regular" price of $6.00 would be $39.34 in 2018. Cox International. Use the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' inflation calculator to see what items cost in today's dollars. For instance, that $3.99 "Cox .049 Babe Bee" engine would be $34.05 in 2025 money...

Oaken Paper Towel Holder

Paper Towel Holder Project (made from oak flooring) - Airplanes and RocketsOne of the first woodworking projects I remember doing after Melanie and I were married and in our own house was making a paper towel holder out of some scrap pieces of oak flooring. The wood was in the basement of the house, probably from when it was originally installed sometime in the 1950s. A few pieces were glued together along their tongue and groove edges, and then scraped and sanded to a smooth, flat surface. The bottom curved relief shape was retained for character. At some point during our many household moves, the paper towel holder disappeared - we probably donated it as with...

Seed-Inspired Monocopter Takes Flight

Seed-Inspired Monocopter Takes Flight - Airplanes and Rockets"From a [maple] seed-inspired design to a 26-minute flight time on a single rotor, a new monocopter developed by SUTD researchers marks a 10-year journey towards redefining how efficient small flying robots can be. When Singapore celebrated its 50th year of independence in 2015, a team of student researchers led by Associate Professor Foong Shaohui from Singapore University Technology and Design (SUTD) embarked on an ambitious challenge: to design and build a drone capable of 50 minutes of sustained flight. At the time, most hobbyist quadcopters could barely manage half of that. The SG50 Multi-Rotor Drone..."

Mariner 2 Keeping a Date with Venus

Keeping a Date with Venus, December 1962 Popular Science - Airplanes and RocketsAt launch in 1962 when this article appeared in Popular Science magazine, Mariner 2's planners imagined Venus cloaked by benign oceans or lush swamps - temperatures perhaps only "hot-house Earth" elevated. Microwave echoes from Earth hinted at a 600 °F surface, yet editors clung to hope that dense clouds concealed cooler seas and maybe biology. Infrared spectra were interpreted as carbon-dioxide greenhouse gases in a thin, relatively clear layer; the idea of surface pressures a hundred times Earth, sulf­uric-acid rain, and global 860 °F basalt plains lay outside anyone's paradigm. A magnetosphere like Earth's was expected; Venus instead proved geologically inert and wind-scoured, with sluggish super-rotation. Fifty years later, radar from Magellan and Earth-borne interferometry have overwritten 1962 optimism with images of barren basalt plains and scorching CO₂ night...

Who Flew What in the 1962 American Radio Plane Championships

Who Flew What in the American Radio Plane Championships, 1963 Annual Edition American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsThe 1962 AMA Nationals competition was considered the first major contest for scale radio controlled airplanes. To wit, this article from the 1963 Annual edition of American Modeler, says R/C scale "finally 'came of age.'" Proportional radio sets were becoming common and the reliability of the airborne electronics and batteries was going up while weight and size was coming down. Modelers were much more willing to trust the radios to safely control models that often took many hundreds of hours to build. Sharing frequencies at or near to the 27 MHz band allocated by the FCC to R/C was still a huge risk, but the venues of major contests provided protected areas that were far enough from most interference...

VLEO Tested on Supersonic Spaceplane

VLEO Tested on Supersonic Spaceplane - Airplanes and Rockets"A space domain awareness (SDA) payload has flown on a sub-orbital spaceplane at supersonic speeds, an advance that could provide an alternative to conventional satellite-based SDA. Scout Space's 'Morning Sparrow' sensor suite flew aboard Dawn Aerospace's Aurora platform, an uncrewed reusable rocket-powered high-altitude aircraft. The flight tested the integration of Scout's 'Morning Sparrow' sensor suite aboard the Aurora platform, taking off from Tāwhaki National Aerospace Centre in New Zealand. The flight also marks Scout as the first commercial operator to fly on Dawn Aerospace's Aurora under a strategic partnership in which Scout will develop a first-of-its-kind tactically responsive Very Low Earth Orbit (VLEO)..."

Northwest Orient Airlines

Northwest Orient Airlines, April 29, 1950 The Saturday Evening Post - RF CafeNorthwest Orient Airlines, a prominent post-war carrier, heavily promoted its transpacific and domestic routes in publications like The Saturday Evening Post during the 1950s. Their advertisements, often full-page and visually appealing, targeted a broad spectrum of potential travelers. A common ad format featured a diverse group of Americans - hunters, fishermen, housewives, and businessmen - representing the airline's wide appeal. This tableau of everyday life was punctuated by a Northwest Orient Airlines aircraft, often a Boeing Stratocruiser or Douglas DC-6, gracefully soaring across the page, connecting these disparate figures and suggesting easy access to destinations both within the US and across the Pacific. The ads emphasized comfort, speed, and the exotic allure of destinations like Tokyo and Manila, solidifying Northwest Orient Airlines' image as a modern...

Airplanes and Rockets Homepage Archives

The Airplanes and Rockets Homepage Archive is a comprehensive collection of every item appearing daily on this website since 2017 - and many from earlier years.

Cal Smith Tells You How to Win with Navy Carrier Models

Cal Smith Tells You How to Win with Navy Carrier Models, July 1961 American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsCal Smith covers a huge amount of turf in this article about the Academy of Model Aeronautics' (AMA's) control line Navy Carrier event equipment, airframes, engines, and flying techniques. Back in 1961, when this article appeared in American Modeler magazine, the U.S. Navy was still sponsoring the AMA National Competition as a means of encouraging young men to consider careers in the Navy as pilots as well as all the other disciplines needed to keep the fleet afloat, so to speak. I always wanted to try building and flying Carrier, but the opportunity never presented itself. There have not been local clubs with a carrier deck, and I have neither the land area nor the money to build my own. It sure seems like flying Carrier shouldn't be as difficult as it really is, but I have watched competitions at Brodak and snagging one of the arrestor lines ...

Heathkit 3-Channel for Cars, Boats, or Lanier's Hawk Glider

Heathkit 3-Channel for Cars, Boats, or Lanier's Hawk Glider, February 1971 American Aircraft Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsA long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, there existed a modeling civilization that enthusiastically embraced the concept of building kits for the personal satisfaction of being able to hone craftsmanship skills, to learn about the make-up of the products being built, and to save money. Radio control systems were expensive on a per channel basis compared to today's systems. Heathkit, as it did with a very wide assortment of electronics products, sold a few radio control systems in kit form. The buyer built everything - transmitter, receiver, and servos. I do no remember whether the NiCd battery packs came pre-assembled. Note that Heathkit servos used capacitive feedback ...

Windmill Planes

Windmill Planes, February 1939 Popular Science - Airplanes and RocketsLeonardo da Vinci is usually credited with producing the first illustration of a helicopter concept. It employed a rotating helical corkscrew device at the top in order to enable the craft and occupant to "screw his way aloft, in much the same manner as Archimedes designed his eponymous helical screw device to lift water from a lower level to a higher level. Water, being dense and cohesive with itself, was easily elevated, whilst air, not being dense or cohesive, did not yield to the same technique. In fact, if the "aerial screw" were able to spin rapidly enough and was of an efficient aerodynamic design, it would work. Here is a 4-screw drone to prove it. These "Windmill Planes" presented in the February 1939 issue of Popular Science magazine represent the state of the art at the time. Surprisingly omitted is an example of Igor Sikorsky's helicopter design, which he first flew successfully in September...

The Digital Decabulator

The Digital Decabulator, February 1966 RC Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsGenius takes on many forms, not the least of which is the ability to concoct and compose an [almost] believable a story describing in the utmost detail the technical workings of a complex mechanical gadget. Items such as a mizule wrench, meta-phasic shielding, blinker fluid, a left-handed screwdriver, and - one of my favorites - the muffler bearing, have been heard in comic routines... er... routinely. No matter how many times you hear them you always laugh again. Some are actually a portmanteau and just sound funny while others are completely made up. This Digital Decabulator article that appeared in a 1966 issue of R/C Modeler magazine is amazing; it pegs the B.S. detector from beginning to end ...

Super Tanks from Simple Change?

Super Tanks from Simple Change?, Annual 1960 Air Trails - Airplanes and RocketsIn this article appearing in the 1960 Annual edition of Air Trails magazine, author Robert Angel introduces his "Uni−Flow" concept for U-Control (aka control line, C/L) model airplanes. His method modifies the standard wedge type metal fuel tank to operate on the same principle as an office water cooler. By adding a strategically placed additional brass tubing vent, Mr. Angel contends the pressure on the inside of the tank remains fairly constant as the vacuum from the engine's carburetor draws fuel. This is preferred to pressurizing the fuel tank via either a tap on the crankcase or off the muffler (which there were not a lot of in 1960. Whether or not the Uni−Flow arrangement is any better than a standard vent line or pressurization is still a matter of debate half a century later, as can be seen in this StuntHanger.com forum thread. In fact, it seems the standard C/L metal fuel tank is a form of uni−flow...

Glight! (Glider Flight)

Glight! (Glider Flight), December 1945 Flying Age Including Flying Aces - Airplanes and RocketsGliders (aka sailplanes) have always attracted me because of their sleek lines and graceful, silent flight. As a sailboat requires its pilot to possess a knowledge of how to exploit properties of air currents to propel his water craft, so, too, must a glider pilot know how to interpret and predict air currents to enable long flights of his aircraft. As an enthusiast and practitioner of both model and full-size boats and airplanes (many moons ago), I have great appreciation for both motor-powered and nature-powered versions, but given a choice between the two, I'll take the sailplane and the sailboat most of the time. It was not until materials science was able to produce spars and skins strong and light enough for enabling high aspect ratio wings that glider transformed from pudgy and boxy to lean and highly aerodynamic. High performance sailplanes can achieve greater than 40:1 glide ratios, meaning 40,000 feet (7½ miles) horizontally for every 1,000 feet of altitude lost (in neutral air). In 1945 when this "Glight!" article appeared in Flying Age magazine, the aforementioned materials discoveries had either not yet been made or not yet applied to glider airframes, as can be seen in these photos...

OS Digital Digitron DS-3, 3-Channel Radio Control System

OS Digitron DP-3, 3-Channel Radio Control System - Airplanes and RocketsMy very first radio control system was an OS Digital Digitron DS−3, 3−channel system. I have wanted to get one for nostalgia's sake for a long time. I had a saved search on eBay for years and finally a few months ago, one came up for auction, which I won. My plan is to replace the original 27.195 MHz electronics with that of my 6−channel 72.750 MHz Futaba system, with necessary modifications to the gimbal potentiometers, NiCad battery, antenna mount, etc. I will need to add a dual rate switch somewhere inconspicuous so as to not detract from the original look. The results will be posted here when done ...

Curtiss P6-E Hawk for Control Line Fans Article & Plans

Curtiss P6-E Hawk for Control Line Fans Article & Plans, November 1957 American Modeler Magazine - Airplanes and RocketsIf you like cutting and gluing wing ribs, this scale control line model of the Curtiss P6−E Hawk is the job for you. Let me know after doing these 92 ribs for two wings if you still feel the same way. These plans and building article appeared in the November 1957 issue of American Modeler magazine. Designed for a .19 to .29 engine, this 31" wingspan model will certainly present a challenge even to the experienced modeler. Of course you need to be able to apply and finish the covering with a high level of perfection in order to fully appreciate the amount of work put into building it. Personally, I would hate to have to use opaque paint for a scale color scheme in order to not have to hide the framework. Then, I would be afraid to ever fly it...

How to Target AirplanesAndRockets.com for Your Google Ads

Google AdSense - it makes good sense - Airplanes and RocketsSome companies have expressed an interest in being able to target Airplanes and Rockets via the Google AdSense program. Yes, it is possible to do that. As you might expect, finding the exact information on the Google AdSense website is a bit difficult. This short video does a good job summarizing exactly how to implement the "Ad Targeting" option, then "Placements," and then add "Websites." Just enter   airplanesandrockets.com   . There are other settings to optimize your advertising campaign with keywords (both included and excluded), pricing, scheduling, statistical data collection and reporting, etc. If you are currently using Google AdSense, then please consider this method, and if you are not using AdSense, now would be a good time to look into it. I have had reports from some companies that experience great results using AdSense (not just on Airplanes and Rockets)...

With the Model Builders

With the Model Builders, December 1939 Flying Aces - Airplanes and RocketsTo the average Joe model builder who otherwise has no shot at national recognition, having his model airplane featured in a magazine like this 1939 issue of Flying Aces was a major source of pride. Even today with easy access to making yourself known on the Internet, there is still something special about seeing your self and/or your model appear in print. The Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMAs) has each month a "Focal Point" section in its Model Aviation magazine consisting of a collection of photos and descriptions of models submitted by members. Most seem to be radio control, with an occasional control line or free flight model. I even managed to have my scratch built 105% Aquila sailplane in there a few years ago. As you can see in this "With the Model Builders" page that there were no R/C models at all. The Good brothers (Walt and Bill) were still in the early stages of developing reliable radio systems at the time...

Air Progress - The Stinson Story

Air Progress - The Stinson Story, September 1949 Air Trails - Airplanes and RocketsMost aviation enthusiasts, including moi, think of the Reliant series of airplanes when the name Stinson is mentioned. Edward "Eddie" Stinson was born in 1893 and at the time of his death due to an airplane crash, he was the highest time pilot in the world with about 16,000 hours of logged flight time. The Stinson Aircraft Company merged with Vultee Aircraft in 1932 and was eventually bought out by the Piper Aircraft Corporation. Here is some interesting trivia I discovered while researching this 1949 Air Trails magazine article: In 1943, Consolidated Aircraft and Vultee merged, creating Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation, popularly known as Convair. Convair (ConVAir) manufactured the F-106 Delta Dart, the B-36 Peacemaker bomber with six pusher propeller engines (and later four jet engines), and also made that familiar XF Pogo vertical-takeoff-and-landing (VTOL) airplane that had counter-rotating propellers and sat on its tail...

World Championships in Germany

World Championships in Germany, Model Annual 1956 Air Trails - Airplanes and RocketsThe 1956 Air Trails magazine Annual Edition reported on the World Championships in Germany for the International Wakefield Cup, F.A.I Free Flight, and Nordic A/2 Glider events. The three '55 World Championships were held in September at the U.S. Air Force's Finthen Airfield, near Wiesbaden, Germany. Competition was fierce amongst European and American contenders. It is worthwhile to remember that 1955 was a mere eleven years after the end of World War II, and that former foes were gathered together for a sporting contest. There could easily have been men there who, without knowing it, were competing against military adversaries they met on the battlefield or in occupied towns a decade earlier...

Pietenpol Air Camper

Pietenpol Air Camper, March 1961 American Modeler Magazine - Airplanes and RocketsWhile not specifically drawn as plans for building a model of the Pietenpol Air Camper, all the detail and dimensions necessary for scaling to any size is possible using these sketches which appeared in the March 1961 issue of American Modeler magazine. The "Piet" has been as popular a subject for modeling as is was and still is for building full-size aircraft. Originally designed in 1930 by Bernard Pietenpol, the craft borrowed many of its metal parts from Ford automobiles, including the engine and suspension spring for a tail skid. Aircraft Spruce & Specialty Company still sells Sitka spruce wood kits for the full-size Pietenpol Air Camper; the total as of this writing is less than $4,000. You can be sure the information contained in this article is trustworthy because it was authored by Mr. Pietenpol himself!

1st TV Airing of "A Charlie Brown Christmas"

"Peanuts on Television," by Charles Schulz - Airplanes and RocketsAs a lifelong admirer of Charles Schulz's Peanuts comic strip, I occasionally buy a collectible item like a Snoopy music box that plays "It's a Long Way to Tipperary," a plastic Schroeder and piano figurine, a Charlie Brown Skediddler, or a Snoopy astronaut from the Apollo era. This time I bought the edition of TV Guide that announced the first showing of the "A Charlie Brown Christmas" cartoon. Also in this edition is the announcement of plans to preempt regular programming to televise the launch of the Gemini VII spacecraft, which carried astronauts Frank Borman and James A. Lovell. It launched right on time at 7:30 pm on December 4th, 1965. "As his millions of fans long since have discovered, under that inept, ineffectual, bumbling exterior of Charlie Brown's there beats a heart as soft and sweet as a marshmallow. In the sequence on these pages, drawn exclusively for TV Guide by Charlie's creator, Charles Schulz, he becomes concerned about the true meaning of Christmas...

Southern Senior High School Class of 1976 Yearbook

Southern Senior High School Class of 1976 Yearbook Photos - Airplanes and RocketsThese images were scanned from my 1976 yearbook for Southern Senior High School in Harwood, Maryland. Only pages with information on Seniors is included. Birthdates have been covered over, but everything else remains. Please let me know if you would like your picture and/or information removed. On the other hand, if you would like to send additional information for posting or would like me to send you the full-resolution scan of your page, then please send me an e-mail at KirtAAR@aol.com. A full list of all the names that go with these photos can be found at the bottom of this page. Having them in text format (versus a photo) will allow search engines to find your name and associate it with Southern Senior High School. Oh, and yes, all the photos are in B&W; there are only eight pages with color in the entire book!

Plane Views - December 1945

Plane Views, December 1945 Flying Age Including Flying Aces - Airplanes and Rockets"Plane Views" was a monthly feature of Flying Age magazine, with this installment being from the December 1945 issue. Flying Aces changed its name to Flying Age in the middle of 1944, probably to focus on the rapidly advancing aeronautical technology prompted by World War II. Whereas Flying Aces was full of fictional stories of flying aces during World War I and the interim up though the middle of World War II - along with plans for airplane models - Flying Age was essentially an entirely new magazine with very little in the way of model aviation and none of the adventure stories. Many Flying Aces readers were highly upset at the extreme change, especially since it essentially abandoned the Flying Aces Club as well. The Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA) had no involvement with either the Flying Aces or the Flying Age magazines. In fact, I don't recall the AMA ever being mentioned. The AMA had its own magazine that went by various titles over the years, including American Modeler, American Aircraft Modeler, and its present incarnation, Model Aviation...

World's Toughest R/C Job - Guidance in Outer Space

World's Toughest R/C Job - Guidance in Outer Space, May 1967 Radio-Electronics - RF CafeSpaceX and Blue Origin have been in the news for the last decade for their efforts (some successful, some not) to autonomously land a spacecraft vertically under its own power. Love it or hate it, NASA has been doing that for nearly six decades. Granted, it was on celestial bodies with lower gravitational acceleration than on Earth, but the earliest craft (Surveyor 1, 1966) had relatively crude electronics aboard, including a Doppler radar, flight computer, and video camera. The now legendary Apollo Guidance Computer has been written about extensively, and is a testimony to the brilliance of the scientists, engineers, managers, operators, and technicians who built and flew it. Articles like this one in the May 1967 issue of Radio-Electronics magazine...

Fast Start Set Uses The AAM Glowdriver

Fast Start Set Uses The AAM Glowdriver (July 1974 American Aircraft Modeler) - Airplanes and RocketsDanny M., a website visitor from The Land Down Under, wrote to ask that I scan and post this article for what today we would call a "smart" glow plug driver. There is also an accompanying article in the same July 1974 edition of American Aircraft Modeler magazine titled "The AAM Glowdriver." Danny said, "I built one in 1978, it is still working fine. When a friend saw how it would light a plug under water and clear a flooded engine instantly he begged me to build him one. Unfortunately the original article is long gone, so I found your website and noticed that you list the magazine in question." Well, thanks to our resourceful mate, now the plans and article are available again in case you are experiencing a bit of nostalgia...

Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA) Plans Service - Airplanes and Rockets


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Academy of Model Aeronautics Government Advocacy Coalition - Airplanes and Rockets