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Experimental Aircraft Accident Rates Down

Experimental Aircraft Accident Rates Down - Airplanes and Rockets"September 30 marked the end of the FAA's fiscal year and with it, the annual conclusion of the annual 12-month tracking of fatal accidents among experimental category aircraft. The preliminary numbers from the agency received late last week appear to present an excellent snapshot of safety over the past year. While the final totals are still being tabulated, the initial total of 37 accidents is well below the FAA's not-to-exceed figure of 46 for the period. That includes 29 fatal accidents in homebuilt aircraft. More details will be available in the coming weeks as the FAA's annual total of GA activity..."

Hi Johnson's Docile R/C .35

Powerplant Revue: Hi's Radio Mill Proves Potent Yet Docile .35, February 1962 American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsHi Johnson was a well-known designer and manufacturer of model airplane engines in the middle of the last century. His series of throttled engines was widely used in the early years of radio control. A lot of research went into producing the engines to produce long lifetime, easy starting, and consistency of operation. The Johnson 35 R/C, which is the subject of this 1962 American Modeler magazine article, was one of the first to used dual ball bearings on the crankshaft, contributing mightily to the accomplishment of the aforementioned goals. The state of the art for all types of model flying had advanced to where pilots could expect...

There's Nothing Mysterious About Ducted-Fan Models!

There's Nothing Mysterious About Ducted-Fan Models!, Model Annual 1956 Air Trails - Airplanes and RocketsAs with most things these days related to model airplane components, extensive research into materials, structure, and functionality have been thoroughly researched and engineered to the point where the modeler has little more to do that install parts into his craft. Parameters have been thoroughly analyzed using computers over a wide range of input stimuli to determine the optimal configuration. The effort dedicated by author Wayne Schindler to design and conduct an experiment to determine the optimal dimensions and shapes for a ducted fan propulsion system is nothing short of academic. His efforts produced a list of design parameters to consider when building a ducted fan-powered model airplane. The net result in Mr. Schindler's case was an amazing 325% thrust improvement...

Chance of Space Debris Entering Airspace Calculated

Chances of Space Debris Entering Busy Airspace Calculated - RF Cafe"A study from Canada has found a 26% annual chance that space debris will re-enter the atmosphere and pass through a busy flight area. The chance of space debris hitting an aircraft is very low, but the research from a team at the University of British Columbia highlights that the potential for uncontrolled space debris to disrupt flights and create additional costs for airlines and passengers is not. The research is published in Scientific Reports. In 2022, a re-entering 20-tonne..."

Inside Britain's Newest Jet: Gloster E.1/44

Inside Britain's Newest Jet: Gloster E.1/44, October 1948 Popular Science - Airplanes and RocketsThe Gloster E.1/44, presented in this 1948 issue of Popular Science magazine, was a British experimental jet fighter developed in the 1940s as a potential single-engine counterpart to the twin-engine Gloster Meteor. Designed by the Gloster Aircraft Company to meet Air Ministry Specification E.1/44, it was powered by a Rolls-Royce Nene turbojet and featured a sleek, straight-wing design with a tricycle landing gear. Initially conceived as a simpler and more economical jet fighter for the Royal Air Force, the project faced numerous delays due to shifting priorities...

DIY Airplane Detector

DIY Airplane Detector, May 1942 Popular Science - RF CafeDuring World War II, Americans, Britains, Frenchmen, and other civilians were seriously engaged in helping to defend their homeland. Those who were not in the military gathered bottles, tin cans, tires, and clothing to use in the war effort. Others volunteered at the Red Cross, veterans' hospitals, and USO offices. Some stood guard at their nation's seashores and land borders, both as armed sentries and as troop and aircraft spotters. As part of the civil defense effort, listening devices were built to help detect the sound of approaching airplanes. In patriotic tradition, magazines like Popular Science published many articles to assist the population contribute. Here is a plan for a "Homemade Plane Detector." It used a horn "antenna" that...

AMA Relocation to Muncie, Indiana 1992

Academy of Models Aeronautics (AMA) Relocation to Muncie, Indiana 1992 - Airplanes and RocketsAs a member of the Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA) since around 1971 (AMA # 92498), I have witnessed a lot of change in the organization as well as in the model industry. When I first joined as a teenager, AMA headquarters consisted of rented office space in a Washington, D.C., building, Richard Nixon was president, and the war in Viet Nam was on nightly news. AMA headquarters moved into a brand new building, which included museum space, on purchased property in Reston, Virginia, in 1983. A growing AMA membership and the desire to consolidate national competitions to a central location resulted in establishing residence in Muncie, Indiana, where the 25,000 square-foot Frank V. Ehling Complex celebrated its grand opening in 1992. Since then, an additional 25,000 square feet of space...

World's Radio Control Endurance Record

World's Radio Control Endurance Record, December 1956 American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsI did not bother to look up what the world record endurance flight length is for an R/C glider as of this writing, but in December 1956 when this article appeared in the first edition of American Modeler magazine, a team of three modelers did 8 hours, 34 minutes and 21 seconds at Torrey Pines, California. That would be an amazing accomplishment with today's equipment, but these guys did it with a vacuum tube receiver and an escapement mechanism driven by a twisted rubber band - rudder-only! No elevator control, no flaps or speed brakes, no gyroscopic stabilization, no proportional rudder deflection. It was left, center, or right...

Cox PT-19 Trainer C/L Airplane

Cox PT-19 Trainer C/L Airplane - Airplanes and RocketsThis is the earliest known photo of me with a control line airplane - a Cox PT-19 Trainer. I'm guessing it was summer of 1969, when I would have been 12 to 13 years old (my birthday is August 18, so it could have been before or after). I remember that 1969 was the year because it was the year that Hurricane Camille tore up Biloxi, Mississippi (where I would many years later be stationed for electronics training in the USAF) and the rains even in Mayo, Maryland, where I lived, were torrential. It is the airplane with which I first learned to fly control line. There was another Cox control line plane that I had prior to the PT-19 Trainer, but I cannot recall...

Bill Gaylord's Guillow's R/C Electric Conversions

Bill Gaylord's Guillow's R/C Electric Conversions - Airplanes and RocketsMr. Bill Gaylord has been gracious enough to allow me to post photos and information about his fine Guillow's free-flight model airplanes that he converted to electric powered R/C. The level of craftsmanship is incredible both in the frame-up and the covering and finish. You can find lots of photos and details of the build on the RCGroups bulletin board. I do not see whether he has ever flown any of these models. My guess is that with the structural beefing up required to support the motor, battery, and R/C gear results in a high wing loading. I personally would never dare risk these models by trying to fly them! They would all spend their days as hanger queens - display only...

Development Highlights

Development Highlights, October 1950 Air Trails - Airplanes and RocketsIt is kind of amazing that as recently as 1950, aircraft manufacturers were still using radial engines on new aircraft. This 1950 issue of Air Trails magazine reports on the Navy's P2V-4 Neptune, the latest model of Lockheed's patrol bomber, which is powered by two 3,200 horse power Wright Turbo-Cyclone radials. In-line engine formats are definitely more streamlined, but from a maintenance perspective, being able to change out a single cylinder rather than an servicing the entire block was definitely handier. Having only ever ridden in one airplane having a radial engine (a Ford Trimotor), I can't say...

Eavesdropping on Satellites

Eavesdropping on Satellites, February 1963 Popular Electronics - Airplanes and Rockets1963 was five years since America's first communications satellite, Echo, was placed in orbit. Echo was a passive, spherical reflector that merely provided a good reflective surface for bouncing radio signals off of. By 1963, when this Eavesdropping on Satellites article appeared in Popular Electronics magazine, the space race was well underway and active communications satellites were being launched at a rapid pace. Spotting and tracking satellites has long been a popular pastime with two types of hobbyists: amateur astronomers using telescopes and binoculars, and amateur radio operators using antennas and receivers...

"Wrongway Feldman's" Krieder Reisner KR21 on Gilligan's Island

"Wrongway Feldman's" Krieder Reisner KR21 on Gilligan's Island - Airplanes and RocketsThe other night Melanie and I were watching an episode of the old Gilligan's Island television show titled "Wrongway Feldman," which was about a long-forgotten, famous aviator who took a wrong turn during a race and ended up being stranded on the same island as seven famous castaways. The "Spirit of the Bronx" airplane featured in the show was referred to by Wrongway as a Krieder Reisner KR21. It is a right nice looking biplane. I immediately hit the pause button and looked it up on Google. The KR-21, according to the EAA AirVenture Museum's website, was manufactured in the 1929-1930 timespan, had a 22'-7" wingspan, and a 125 hp Kinner B5 (R-440), 372 cubic inch, 5-cylinder radial...

Is 2025 the Year of eVTOL?

Is 2025 the Year of eVTOL? - Airplanes and Rockets"After years of aircraft and infrastructure development, the electric vertical takeoff and landing industry faces a broadly self-imposed deadline of 2025 for entering commercial service with a new generation of air taxis, shuttles, and freight carriers. Many companies have said for years that they would begin carrying passengers or cargo and ramping up mass production of aircraft by 2025. Today, however, meeting that goal seems like a lot to ask, given the challenging investor climate and the long process for gaining FAA certification of new aircraft. In many ways the field of eVTOL companies has developed in a manner similar to that of the early car industry, which began with dozens of manufacturers..."

License-Free Radio Control

License-Free Radio Control, May 1962 Radio Electronics - Airplanes and RocketsWe take for granted today that we are able to legally use radio control systems without obtaining an operator's license, but that has only been the case since the late 1970s. Prior to that, a Citizens Radio Station License needed to be procured from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). No examination was required, but a fee was charged. I think mine cost something like $5. FCC Part 15 rules permitted license-free operation in designated frequency bands then as it does now, with a limit on maximum power output for both intentional and unintentional...

JPL & Mt. Wilson Observatory Closed Amid LA Fire

JPL & Mt. Wilson Observatory Closed Amid LA Fire - Airplanes and Rockets"NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the historic Mount Wilson Observatory in California appear to be unscathed by the Eaton fire burning through Pasadena and Altadena - for now. However, over 150 JPL employees have lost their homes, said the center's director Laurie Leshin in a post on X on Friday morning. The center lies in the foothills of Pasadena, within the Eaton fire's mandatory evacuation zone. The Eaton fire, which has burned 14,000 acres and 5,000 structures as of Friday afternoon, is one of several fires raging in the L.A. region this week amid dangerously high winds and dry conditions..."

Aerospace & Aviation News

3 Drone Pilots Arrested for Interfering with LA Firefighters

• The Charge Toward Fleetwide Unleaded Fuel

• Good News for Experimental Aircraft Accident Totals

Missing Pilot Found After Fatal Plane Crash

• Last Call for AOPA Foundation Scholarships

• EAA Evaluating FAA Medical Policy Changes

Sailplane Aero-Tow

Sailplane Aero-Tow, American Aircraft Modeler - Final Issue (March 1975) - Airplanes and RocketsAirplanes & Rockets website visitor David T. wrote asking about locating an article where the author reports on having initially tried aero-towing by a powered airplane with the tow line connected to the tail of the tow plane. I have never seen that method tried, and this article demonstrates why it is not commonplace. Disaster evidently resulted, so the author ended up connecting the tow line to the wing hold-down bolts and success ensued. This is the only aero-tow article I could find in the 1975 year range that David referenced, but it is not what he was looking for. If you know of an article that contains the experience he requested, please send me an e-mail and I will pass it along to David...

American Modeler Magazine History

American Modeler magazine history - Airplanes and RocketsAmerican Modeler magazine has a rich history rooted in the enthusiasm for model aircraft, covering topics such as building, flying, engines, fuel, contests, advertisements, and product reviews. Its lineage can be traced back to the publication Air Trails, which underwent a transformation in 1955 to focus on scale modeling, broadening its scope to include aircraft, cars, and trains. This evolution culminated in the December 1956 rebranding of Air Trails as American Modeler. The first issue under this title was volume 47, number 3. Initially, the magazine was published monthly, catering to a wide audience of hobbyists and enthusiasts. Albert L. "Al" Lewis, a pivotal figure in the magazine's history, served as editor during its formative years. His tenure began in the late 1950s and extended...

Troubleshooting a Gas Motor

Trouble-Shooting a Gas Motor, October 1941 Flying Aces - Airplanes and RocketsThe term "gas" when referring to miniature 2-cycle internal combustion engines (ICE) for model airplanes, boats, cars, and helicopters, has its origin in the early days of modeling. Similar to full-size automotive gas engines, they ran on gasoline, and used a spark plug with a high voltage power source and timing mechanism that was an integral part of the engine. As with a lawn mower or outboard boat engine, timing of the spark relative to the position of the piston in the cylinder is critical for optimum performance. Tuning the system could be a real challenge if inferior gas was used, the spark plug was worn or dirty, or the spark generator / timing was poorly...

A Wind Tunnel You Can Make and Operate

A Wind Tunnel You Can Make and Operate, from April 1957 American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsToday, computer software has replaced much of the simulation and experimentation that used to be the sole domain of wind and smoke tunnels. The mathematical equations are so complex for high resolution, 3-dimensional calculations that very powerful computers are required to run even relatively simple simulations. While there are programs that can be purchased for about $1,000 that do a good job for uncomplicated shapes, large, university and corporation scale computers are needed for "serious" work like designing commercial and military aircraft, passenger...

New Radio Control Gear for Model Airplanes

New Radio Control Gear for Model Airplanes, August 1940 QST - Airplanes and RocketsOften when I see photos of some of the early radio control gear for model airplanes, I have a simultaneous reaction of aghastness and marvel at the crudity and ingenuousness, respectively, of the electromechanical devices - the same kind of reaction I have to stories about early surgical procedures and equipment. In 1940, when this article appeared in the ARRL's QST magazine, successful takeoffs and landings were considered notable events not so much because of pilot ability, but because of the low reliability of available electronic and mechanical gear. Vacuum tubes with attendant heavy, high voltage power supplies, and heavy metal gears and shafts required large airframes to support all the weight and bulk. Modern-day low-cost, readily available R/C models incorporate, depending on your requirements, autopilot, total prefabrication of airframe, propulsion, and guidance components. BTW, dig Mr. Bohnenblust's ride in that photo...

Antique Rope Bed with Sacking Bottom

Antique Rope Bed with Sacking Bottom - Airplanes and RocketsAfter dropping off some stuff at the Erie City Mission, Melanie and I walked through the display floor to see what was available. We've gotten some good things there in the past, including a Queen Anne chair and a china hutch. We've been looking for a used, full-size bed for the spare bedroom to replace the twin bed that used to be our daughter's. Fortunately, the Erie City Mission had recently acquired a turn-of-the-20th-century rope bed that, according to lore, used to belong to the owner of a defunct local brewery (Kohler?). Heavy pine is used for the entire framework. It was in fair shape, with expected dings and scratches from 100+ years of use. Rather than undertake a total restoration...

World's Largest Air-Model Contest

World's Largest Air-Model Contest, November 1961 American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsThe 1961 Academy of Model Aeronautics' (AMA's) National Model Airplane Championships (aka "The Nats") were held that year at Willow Grove Naval Air Station just North of Philadelphia. The U.S. military was concerned with encouraging young men to excel in the field of aviation in order to help breed future pilots, mechanics, researchers, and other aerospace related careers within the Army, Air Force, Marines, and Navy. In fact, the U.S. Navy was a prime sponsor of the Nats for many years. In the early 1970s, geniuses in the Pentagon decided that such activity was no longer a good investment, so the AMA had to find other private and public venues for events. The AMA's flagship publication, American Modeler magazine, provided coverage...

Angstrom Eberenz, AMA 2024 C/L Champion

Angstrom Eberenz, AMA 2024 Control Line Junior Champion - RF CafeIf you have been around the Airplanes and Rockets website for a while, you are probably aware that my hobby activities have been funded by my profession in radio communications (see RFCafe.com). Reading this, you likely also know that each year the AMA holds national championships for all forms of model aviation including radio control, control, and free flight. Airplanes, helicopters, and theses day drones, are the primary focus, while rockets, cars, and boats are sometimes featured. Various classes of contents are conducted, including Expert and Standard, Senior and Junior, and others. What really caught my attention this year and last year was the first name of the champion for the Junior class of control line flying - Angstrom! Is that a great name or what? It sure beats Kirt. The name, of course, is a unit of wavelength named in honor of Anders Jonas Ångström. Here is the origin of Ebernez.

PHASA-35 Solar Stratospheric Trials

PHASA-35 Solar Aircraft Stratospheric Trials - Airplanes and Rockets"Designed to operate as a high-altitude, long-endurance surveillance and reconnaissance platform the aircraft - defined as a High Altitude Pseudo Satellite (HAPS) Uncrewed Aerial System (UAS) - has been designed by BAE Systems subsidiary Prismatic, a division of the company's FalconWorks advanced research and development arm. Alongside reconnaissance, the aircraft has the potential to be used in the delivery of communications networks including 4G and 5G and could be used in a wide range of applications, such as disaster relief and border protection, as a cost-effective alternative..."

Computer Chair Carpet Protector

Computer Chair Carpet Protector - Airplanes and RocketsWith as expensive as carpet is these days (even cheap carpet is expensive), protecting it from the ravages of a computer chair is essential for preservation. Casters wreak havoc with carpet, and even if you replace the castors with fixed feet (w/ or w/o Teflon bottoms), deep depressions are formed. One solution is too buy one of the plastic carpet protectors, but they're big and ugly. Nice ones are available, but they're usually very expensive. I have seen picture of very nice rectangular wooden surfaces people have built to allow the chair to roll, but my space is cramped. All I need is a compact surface to contain the chair feet without requiring the chair to roll. Since the seat swivels, getting in and out of it is simple enough. My solution is shown in the photos. It did not take long to construct, and is as diminutive as possible, being just large enough to cover the foot span. The base of the computer chair carpet protector is cut from 1/2" furniture grade plywood...

Short Snorter Flying Wing C/L Model

Short Snorter, October 1958 American Modeler Magazine - Airplanes and RocketsIf you are looking for a little bit different type of control line model, then Short Snorter might fit the bill. It was designed by George Hinz and appeared in the October 1958 issue of American Modeler magazine. Short Snorter is .20 to .35-size stunt or combat model that is essentially a flying wing, and features a built-up fuselage and wing. The wingspan is around 40", but of course since you will be printing the plans, you can make the model larger or smaller. standard construction materials and methods are used throughout. Mr. Hinz cautions about making certain that the center of gravity is properly located since a tail ...

O.S. Digitron DP-3 R/C System w/Packaging & Documentation

O.S. Digitron DP-3, 3-Channel Radio Control System with original packaging & documentation - Airplanes and RocketsThis is a rare find. After having a Saved Search on eBay for years, looking for an O.S. Digitron DP-3, 3-Channel Radio Control System with original packaging and documentation, one finally came up for sale. It was listed with inexact wording in the title, so maybe that's why I found it before others. It had only been listed for a few minutes, and I bought it instantly. This has got to be one of the primo examples left in the world. All the original packaging and documentation is here, even including a set of O.S. Digital decals. Why the enthusiasm, you might ask? This was my very first R/C system that I bought from a neighbor for $100, back in 1974, when I was a mere 15 or 16 years old. To my best recollection, it came with everything here. The fitted leather transmitter case was very nice, and it kept the metal chassis in excellent condition. My radio was on 27.195 MHz (green flag), and at the time, an FCC license was required to operate it...

AMA Nationals 1974 Lake Charles: CL Stunt

AMA Nationals 1974 Lake Charles: CL Stunt, November 1974 American Aircraft Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsBack in the days when the cycle time between writing articles, proofing, laying out pages, shipping hard copies to printers, setting up presses, and preparing magazine for mailing was about a three or four month process, coverage of a July-August event would finally appear in November-December timeframe. Photos, of course, were all in black and white. Nowadays, with everything done digitally and involving almost no physical, hands-on steps in the process, we often see Nats event happenings as early as September. The November 1974 issue of American Aircraft Modeler magazine included extensive coverage of that year's Nats, which was held in Lake Charles, Louisiana. This is the control line stunt portion. If you were around during the era...

Alain Pons' Turbojet "Duck" Canard

Alain Pons' Turbojet "Duck" Canard - Airplanes and RocketsThe turbojet-power version of "Alain's Duck" canard has made its maiden flight. As you can see in the video (on the page), it handles as smoothly as the other versions. Of course Alain's piloting skills play at least a small part in how well she flies. More details will follow once Alain supplies them ...

R/C Model Boats - And Aweigh They Go!

R/C Model Boats - And Aweigh They Go!, Annual 1960 Air Trails - Airplanes and RocketsBy 1960 when this "And Aweigh They Go!" article appeared in the Annual edition of Air Trails magazine, radio control systems had advanced to where they were providing a semblance of proportional control, were smaller in volume and weight (thanks to semiconductors rather than vacuum tubes), and were more affordable and reliable. Model engines, too, were more convenient and easier to operate thank to the advent of glow fuel and glow plugs rather than gasoline and spark ignition systems. Some modelers still employed the older equipment or a mix of old and new, but the serious contenders did then as they do now by tending to go with the latest and greatest engines, electronics, hardware, and construction techniques. The model boats featured here are examples of the latter...

Here's a Flying "Broomstick"

Here's a Flying "Broomstick" - Article and Plans, January 1941 Flying Aces - Airplanes and RocketsYou might expect this "Flying Broomstick" article to be about one of the many novelty witch-on-a-broomstick models that typically appear in September or October issues of model airplane magazines, but in this case it is simply a contest-worthy Class C rubber free flight job. The fuselage has a slight resemblance to an old wooden broomstick, but the similarity pretty much stops there. The hollow tubular fuselage made of rolled 1/16"' balsa holds 18 strands of rubber. Semi-elliptical shaped wings with a gull type dihedral give it unique look. Per designer / builder Kukuvich, "Flights of 2 min., 30 sec., are common in "dead air" and are accomplished without the help of risers..."

Missy DARA QM Article & Plans

Missy DARA QM Article & Plans, April 1974 American Aircraft Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsAirplanes and Rockets visitor Dave J. wrote to ask that I post this article on the Missy DARA (Dayton Air Racing Association ) quarter midget racer that appeared in the April 1974 edition of American Aircraft Modeler magazine. It is a scale knockoff of the full-scale Miss Dara Formula racer. I offer to do this for people at no charge as time permits. Also, I usually post a scan of the plans, but if you are going to build the model, I highly recommend buying a set from the AMA Plans Service if they are still available. Missy Dara plans do not appear to be available at this time. The AMA will scale the plans to any size you need, so you're not locked into the original wingspan. House of Balsa manufactured a Miss Dara kit back in the 1980s...

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!

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)...

Packard Bell Legend 406CD Desktop Computer

Packard Bell Legend 406CD Desktop Computer - Airplanes and RocketsBeing a lover of vintage electronics and aircraft modeling equipment, I had the bright idea that I would buy a vintage Packard Bell desktop computer like I had many moons ago and transplant the innards of my ASUS G750JX Republic of Gamers (RoG) notebook computer into it. After carefully measuring the notebook computer's outside dimensions and estimating the size of the various models of PB computers, I settled on a Packard Bell Legend 406CD and bought it from a guy on eBay. I wanted the type that actually sits on the desktop, with the monitor sitting on top of it. The computer arrived as advertised - dirty but in good mechanical condition, and cleanable. Having never opened the ASUS G750JX ...

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)...

Wind Flying

Wind Flying - September 1972 American Aircraft Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsAirplanes and Rockets website visitor Lars B. wrote from Sweden requesting that I scan this "Wind Flying" article from the September 1972 edition of American Aircraft Modeler magazine. It describes a method for replacing engines and motors with human power for preforming some pretty impressive C/L aerobatics on windy days. Basically, you drag the model airplane around on its control lines, which often required not just turning in a circle while standing in one place, but walking around a small circle in order to get more speed. If there is any wind, you need to put extra effort into the pulling when moving into the wind. I can remember doing this as a teenager, only I did it with the engine in place but not...

AM-FM Clock Radios from the 1969 Sears Christmas Wish Book

AM-FM Clock Radios from the 1969 Sears Christmas Wish Book - Airplanes and RocketsHere on page 388 of the Sears 1969 Christmas Wish Book is a wide selection of modern AM-FM clock radios. The ad says, "Instant sound solid state table and clock radios." In 2011, most people use their cellphone clocks for everything from appointment keeping to wakeup alarms. Displays are LCD with a few LED straggles still around. The model shown here can only be found at the Salvation Army store or a thrift shop... maybe at a yard sale. Use the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' inflation calculator to see what items cost in today's dollars. That $19.50" AM-FM clock radio would cost...

Craftsman 12" Wood Lathe

Craftsman 12" Wood Lathe (Model No. 113.228162) - Airplanes and RocketsMy introduction to using a wood lathe was my high school wood shop class in my Junior year (circa 1974-1975) at Southern Senior High in Harwood, MD. Mr. Charles Smith was the teacher. I have him to thank for imparting a lifelong love for woodworking. Back in those days, we respected teachers by addressing them Mr., Mrs., or Ms. Surprisingly, about a decade after graduating, I ran into Mr. Smith at AACC while taking a class toward my electrical engineering degree (he was not in my class). The wood shop at Robins AFB was well-equipped, and include a wood lathe. I used it to turn a couple lamps from blocks of oak provided by a Sgt. Eddie Nugent from my radar shop, who had cut down a tree a year or so earlier. One of the two, which incorporated a burnt-out thyratron tube from the S-band search radar, disappeared decades ago. I gave it to Melanie as a Christmas present before we got married (in 1983). The other oak lamp is still around today. After getting out of the USAF in 1982, I bought a Craftsman 12" wood lathe from the Sears store in Parole Plaza, in Annapolis, Maryland. When Melanie and I got married, I set it up in the basement work shop of our tiny Cade Cod house in Arnold, Maryland. You can also see in the photo my first Craftsman radial arm saw, also bought at the Parole Plaza Sears store. After four decades of moving from place to place many times, I still have a Craftsman radial arm saw...

Amateur Radio Astronomy Articles in QST

Amateur Radio Astronomy Articles in QST - Airplanes and RocketsQST is the official publication of the Amateur Radio Relay League (ARRL), the world's oldest and largest organization for Ham radio enthusiasts. Many amateur radio operators also have an interest in astronomy and as such, occasionally articles appear covering topics on amateur radio astronomy. There are also quite a few articles dealing indirectly with aspects of astronomy such as Earth-Moon-Earth (EME) communications where signals are bounced off the moon's surface in order to facilitate transmission (although it is really more of a hobby achievement). The October 2012 edition of QST had an article entitled, "Those Mysterious Signals," which discusses galactic noise in the 10-meter band. Arch Doty (W7ACD) writes about the low-level background noise that is persistent in the high frequency (HF) bands. At HF, Cygnus A and Cassiopeia A are major sources of cosmic noise, for example. Low level signals come from pulsars, quasars, black holes, and other remote objects that were created during the early formation of our universe. However, the strongest background noise emanates from the center of the Milky Way galaxy with a source that is a mere 27,000 years old...

Mobilgas Socony-Vacuum Aviation Fuel

Mobilgas Socony-Vacuum Aviation Fuel, September 10, 1945 Life - Airplanes and RocketsThroughout World War II, American companies produced lavish, full-color advertisements for magazines to let the public know how the war effort was being aided by their products. Part of the motivation was probably to ease the suffering most people were experiencing through rationing of gasoline, food staples like flour and sugar (and coffee), and the scarcity of new products and replacement parts as priority was given to supplying our military's efforts to beat back and defeat the Communist, Socialist, Nazi regimes across Europe, Africa, and the South Pacific. Mobilgas, Mobileoil, and other such variations on the Mobile name were major players in the energy industry at the time this advertisement appeared in Life magazine. Not knowing what the "Socony-Vacuum" part of the label meant, I did a search and found this on the Exxon website: "The flying red horse was first used by Vacuum Oil in South Africa in 1911. In 1931, when Vacuum merged with Socony, the red Pegasus – a symbol of speed and power – was adopted as its U.S. trademark. In 1968, Mobil adopted new-look Pegasus service stations. The red Pegasus remains among the most recognized corporate symbols in American petroleum history." I wouldn't bet much money on the last statement. My guess is almost nobody under 40 years old could tell you what it is.

AAMCo Andrews Aeromaster Too Biplane Kit

AAMCo Andrews Aeromaster Too Biplane Kit - Airplanes and RocketsWhile I never had the pleasure of owning an AAMCo Lou Andrews Aeromaster Too biplane, it was one of the many kits I though someday I would build. After 61 years of existence, there still is no Aeromaster Too kit in my collection, and at this point likely never will be. The Aeromaster Too was a four-channel ("full-house" as it was known back in the day) aerobatic biplane with a 48" wingspan for .45 to .61 in3 displacement glow fuel engines. It used balsa, plywood, and hardwood construction along with music wire components for the landing gear and cabane struts. The photos presented here were downloaded from multiple Aeromaster Too kits listed on eBay. They typically sell in the $125 to $200 price range, which is very comparable to what a new kit of similar size and complexity would sell for today...

Sketchbook - Hints and Kinks by the Readers

Sketchbook, October 1961 American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsThe "Sketchbook" feature in American Modeler magazine presented "hints and kinks" furnished by readers came up with good ideas to help make building and operating model airplanes (primarily), car, and boats a little easier. Some of them are pretty good, and I have applied the principles in my own efforts over the years. October 1961, the date of this set of ideas, was a couple years before my time of building models. Being born in 1958, it would probably have been around 1966 or 1967 before I was building and flying Estes rockets and rubber powered airplanes. By 1969 I was flying Cox control line models, and it was maybe 1971 or 1972 before building my first control line model. When reading over these vintage Sketchbook ideas, I always pay attention to the names of the submitters to see whether any are recognizable as someone who would later become renowned in the modeling world. There is a good chance that the "E. R. Violett, Jr." with the control line fabric hinge technique is none other than Bob Violett...

Race Car Clinic: Mercedes Benz G.P.

Race Car Clinic: Mercedes Benz G.P., October 1961 American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsNow here's a term I had never heard before: "desmodromic valve." I thought it was something that Cox made up by borrowing the "drom" part of Thimble Drome. Not so. According to Wikipedia, "In general mechanical terms, the word desmodromic is used to refer to mechanisms that have different controls for their actuation in different directions." It describes the type of valve used in the full-scale Mercedes-Benz W196 Racer. The Cox model uses their famous .049 glow fuel engine. There is an ocean of information available on Cox engines, cars, helicopters, boats, and airplanes. The Cox Mercedes-Benz W196 was a scale model of the real Formula One car that ran in many European Grand Prix races. The mechanical features were quite sophisticated, including a flywheel with integrates fan for cooling the engine, spring-loaded suspension, and an adjustable muffler for desired quietness/power tradeoff, and careful engineering to assure compatibility of hot metal parts against molded plastic. The Cox Mercedes-Benz Racer on occasionally shows up on eBay, but be prepared for a shock price tag compared to the original $20 back in 1961 when this article appeared in American Modeler magazine...

David J. Holland's "Flying Men" Cover Art

David J. Holland's "Flying Men" Cover Art Model Article & Plans, 1962 Annual Edition American Modeler - Airplanes and RocketsOne nice thing about having a website like Airplanes and Rockets is that every once in a while a famous person will contact me with some great information. It happened again recently when David J. Holland wrote about how he still has the original artwork of his "Flying Men" models from the cover of the 1962 Annual Edition of American Modeler. He sent a photo of the magazine cover next to the framed original, along with a photo of his actual control line model. Says Dave, "The picture is of a magazine cover and article about my funny face models in the '50s and early 1960s. The model pictured is the third version as I wore out the first two. The story and cover were the result of a demonstration flight I did during the Sunday air show at the 1961 Nationals at the Willow Grove, PA, naval air station. I have the original art work of the cover, four times the size of the magazine..."



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