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deicer Posted June 28, 2021 Author Share Posted June 28, 2021 https://aviationhumor.net/best-examples-of-aircraft-camouflage/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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A330PilotCanada Posted July 7, 2021 Share Posted July 7, 2021 Good Morning All: Just received this long list of aircraft nicknames please add your favourites. Cue the scroll button haters A10: Warthog A318: Nanobus, Baby Bus A319: Microbus, Shorty, Short Bus (Derogatory American phrase) A320: MiniBus, NintendoJet, ScareBus, Chainsaw, Deathjet, Freddie Kruegers wet dream, Toulouse Grasscutter, The Strimmer, Fifi, Die-by-Wire, the French Bitch, Sully's Ark, Plastic Fantastic A320 is known as 'The John Wayne' Because they 'Chop down trees, move mountains and kill Indians!' A330: Slippy, The Aircraft in Plastic, The Bus, HalfPastThree A340: Four-person Hair Dryer, LowRider (takes so long to get off the ground) A340-400: the Noodle (as it's so long that it flexes like a noodle on takeoff) A350: The Racoon A380: Double Decker Bus, Megabus, Whalejet, the Wannabe Queen, Flying Forehead A400M Atlas: Fatlass Alouette: Chicken chaser Antonov 2: Bumblebee, Annochka Archer Maker: WidowMaker AT6 Harvard: Halfard, Yellow Peril. ATR: All Those Relays. Avro Shackleton: Shacklecaster, flying Cow, Old Grey Lady, 10 Thousand rivets flying in loose formation Avro Vulcan: Tin-triangle, Flat-iron, Mechanical Hang Glider AW62 Argosy: Whistling Wheelbarrow (two tails makes it look like a wheelbarrow), Whistling/Flying Tit (because of the front nose profile), The Agony ( painful & noisy), The 40 ton converter (turns kerosene into noise) BAC 111:Pocket rocket, Bone Vibrator. BAe146: Viscount 900, Smurfjet with 5 APU's, The Gas Chamber, Bumble-et, Baby Jumbo, Bring Another Engine, 1-4-Sick, submarine- low slow and out of sight, Airborne Auschwitz, Barbie Jet, Tonka Toy/Jet, 4 oil leaks connected by an electrical fault, The Quadra-Puff, Lead Sled, Mini Galaxy, Sky Dozer, Fisher Price Starlifter, "1 aeroplane, 4 engines, needs 6", The Slug, Toxic Terror, Muffler (Because all the noise is on the inside), Fruit Bat, Flying cockroach, Dungbeetle, Jump Jet, The SUV of RJs, Jumbolino, Aluminum Buffalo, four hairdryers in close formation. BAe ATP: Advanced/Another Technical Problem, The Parrot (cos it's just a big Budgie), Ancient Technology Perpetuated, Bat Pee, Skoda, 80p, Wigwam (A TeePee). BAe Harrier: Leaping Heap BAe Jetstream: Junkstream, Wetdream, Soda-stream, Sweatstream, Jetscream, J-Ball, Jizzstream BAe Nimrod: Never Intended for Maritime Reconnaissance Or Development. Beta: the MeatBeater Bristol Beaufighter: Whispering Death Bristol Freighter: Whispering Death, 10,000 rivets in close formation Beech 18: Flying snag, Bugsmasher Beech 76 Duchess: Dutch Ass, the Dutchy Beech 99: 99-Liner Beech Baron: Ball tearer Beech Bonanza: Doctor killer (its reputation as such is ubiquitous) Beech 200: Super K Beech 1900: Flipper, Dolphin, Stonefish, Mini Guppy, Stretch King Air, Bitch 1900 Beech T-34: Radial Interceptor Bell 206: Deathranger, Hydraulic palmtree Bell UH-1: Huey, Hog, Dustoff Beverly: Flying Longhouse Bristol 188: The Mayfly Bristol Britannia: The Whispering Giant (Was this the original WG?), Freighter version: The Whispering Warehouse Bristol Freighter: Freightener Boeing Stratocruiser: Stratoboozer (a reference to the bar these aircraft had on board), "The Best Three Engined Plane Crossing the Atlantic" Boeing E4B: Doomsday Plane, The Ark, Double Humper Boeing T43: Gator (for Navigator) Boeing 707: Slush bucket, Water wagon Boeing 727: 3 holer, Tri-jet, Trisaurus, Triple chrome-plated stovepipe, Jurassic Jet, Ear Blaster, The Scooter Boeing 737: Tin mouse, Maggot, Pocket Rocket Socket, FLUF (Fat Little Ugly F**cker), Light Twin, Baby Boeing, Fat Freddy, Guppy, Thunder Guppy (series 1/200), Yuppy Guppy, Super Guppy (series 3/4/500), Pig, Bobby (BOeing BaBY), Rudder Rotor, Fat Albert, Dung Beatle. Boeing 737NG: Super FLUF (Fat Little Ugly F**cker). Boeing 747: Jumbo Jet, Whale, The Valiant, Upstairs and Downstairs, Lump, Humpback, Queen of the Skies (used for many aircraft but probably mostly the 747), the Aluminum Overcast. Boeing 747SP: Short Plane, Stupid Purchase. Boeing 757: Stick Insect, AtariFerrari, Slippery Snake, Flying Pencil, Long Tall Sally (long legs and two great big…engines.), Greased Bullet Boeing 757-300: Long misery, Subway Train. Boeing 767: Dumpster, Slug, Stumpy Boeing 777: B737 on steroids, Cripple Seven (I.F.E. Problems??), Bigfoot (from the tripple bogey landing gear), Sasquatch, T7, Seventh Wonder, Trouble Seven, Grouper (the front end does look like one of those fish) Boeing 787 Dreamliner: Tupperjet (plastic tupperware), Firebird (since several early on-board fires), Seven-Late-Seven, Bad Dream Liner, Flatliner, Sparky the Game Changer, Binliner, The microwave (cooks batteries). Boeing C-17 Globemaster: The Moose. Barney (Fred’s fat little friend). B24: The Crystal Shithouse B52: BUMF (Big Ugly Mother f***er) or BUFF. (Big Ugly Fat F****er), BFiftyTwoManyWheels BN 2 Islander: 225 - 2 wings, 2 engines(?) 5 Wheels, Slander, Bongo, Noise inducting sound machine, with a slow flying by-product BN 2A Trislander: Try Harder, Bloody Nice Aircraft (!), Clockwork TriStar, Poor Man's 727 Bombardier Q400: Mega-Whacker Bombardier CRJ: BarbieJet, Canuckjet, Canuckiejet, Ken&Barbie Dreamjet, Reset Jet, Replacement Jet, Climb Restricted Jet Buccaneer: Buccanana (due to its banana like shape) CA-15 Winjeel: The Ginwheel CAC Wirraway: The "Flying Chaff-cutter" (due to its clattering engine noise) Canberra T17: Warthog (due to its warty nose) Casa: Christ A Sh***y Aeroplane Cessna 150: One Filthy, the buck and a half, Cesspit. Cessna A150 Aerobat: Aerosplat Cessna 172 Cutlass: Strutless, Gutless, Flying Chevette (due to its lack of performance and Cessna’s efforts to make their aircraft similar to the cars of the era - that 1970’s upholstery!). Cessna 177 Cardinal: The Pontif Cessna 185: Buck eighty-five Cessna 207: Crowdkiller, Slug, Moneymaker Cessna 210 Centurian: Coffin, 2-Ton Cessna 337 Sky Master: Sky Disaster, Sky Maggot, Push-me-Pull-you, Mix Master, Bug Smasher, Push-me-Pull-me, Blow-me-Suck-me, suck & blow job, two-toed tanglefoot. Cessna 402 Utiliner: Undyliner. Cessna Citation: Levitation, Crustacean, Mutation, Slowtation, Nearjet, Bugjet, Twin Hoover Cessna T-37: Tweet, Tweety or Tweety Bird (because of its high, shrill engine sound) CF100: The Lead Sled, Clunk CH-47 Chinook: Two palm trees ******* a dumpster, Hooker, Shithook, RPG Magnet, Death Banana Concorde: Great White, The Rocket, Rockership, Pocket Rocket, Paraffin Pencil Convair B36: Aluminium overcast Convair F102 Delta Dagger: The Deuce Convair 580: Mountain Master, Vomit Comet Convair 990: Coronado, Smoky Joe CRJ: Canadair Rookie Jet CRJ200: Shortdart, Lawndart, barbiejet CRJ900: Longdart CT-4A: (which was painted bright yellow and green in RAAF service) - the Plastic Parrot Curtis SB2C Helldiver: the Beast, SonofaBitch2ndClass, Big-Tailed Beast and the 'Two-Cee' DC 2: Deuce. DC 3: Dak, Dakotasaurus Rex, Gooney Bird, Draggin' Wagon, Douglas Racer (compliments of late BC/A columnist Torch Lewis and the airplane's leisurely 140 KIAS cruise speed), Dakleton (South African built Daks as replacement for AVRO Shackletons), Dizzy Three, Dowager Dutchess, Duck DC 6: Douglasaurus Rex DC 7: Douglas Seven Seas (From DC-7C) DC 8: DC Late, Old Smokey, Greasy8, Death Cruiser, Whiney Bird, Cigarette Jets (Long skinny fuselages and long thin engines that smoked), Santa Monica Anteater (for Douglas' HQ city and the airplane's loooong nose), The Long Beach Cable Car (If you look at the fuel panel, all those levers were connected to their respective valves by long cable runs. Same with the trim, flight controls and outflow valves) DC 9-10/15: Pocket Rocket, Mini-Me, Baby Nine DC 9: Greasy 9, Diesel 9, DC3-GT, Douglas Death Ship-(heard from a PSA pilot in the 1980s due the difficulties during FAA certification) DC 10: Diesel 10, Death Contraption 10, Death Cruiser 10, Daily Crash 10, Donald's Disaster, Crowd Killer MD 11: The Diva, More Death 2, I also like 'Scud' for the MD-11, once you launched it, you were not sure were it was going to land. DH 82 Tiger Moth: Terror Moth. DH Comet: Vomit DH Vampire: The whistling pisscan. DHC 1 Chipmonk: Chippie, Chukmonk. DHC 3 Otter: Swine, Steam Otter. DHC 4 Caribou: The Gravel Truck ("The only aircraft known to man that could suffer a birdstrike from behind".) DHC 5 Buffalo: Barfalo DHC 6 Twin Otter: Tin Otter, Twin Rotter, Twotter, Stoneboat, Twottercopter, noise powered aeroplane, Double Udder DHC 7 Dash Seven: Quad Otter, Pogo Stick DHC 8 Dash Eight: Dash Late, Crashbait, DashTrash, Trash8, Crash8, Trauma Tube, Dashidy Trashidy Boom, The Sausage DO 17: Flying Pencil DO 228: Doorknob, Gonzo (everything forward of the wing leading edge looks like a certain Muppet's head) DO 328: Dork DO 328J: Dorkjet Douglas Maurader: Flying Prostitute Douglas A1D Skyraider: The Spad Douglas A4 Skyhawk: Bantam Bomber, Scooter Douglas AC47 (DC3 Gunship): Spooky, Puff the Magic Dragon, Fantasma, Dragon Dak Douglas C54 Skymaster: Biscuit Bomber (from Berlin Airlift days) Douglas C124 Globemaster: Shakey Bird, "Old Shaky" due to its tendency to do a lot of that in flight, and "the Aluminium Cloud" because it was, with four props and a double high fuselage basically built on DC-6 / C-118 wings, the hugest return on anyone's radar Douglas Skywarrior: 'All Three Dead' a mixture of its awful early safety record, three crew, and its US Navy designation of A-3D eHang: eWang, Macerator EMB110 Bandierante: Bandit, Randy Banty EMB120 Brasillia: Garbage Can, Brakillya, Mexican King Air, The Bro, The Braz EMB135: Scopebuster EMB145: Jungle Jet, Barbie Jet, The Windows 98 Plane (seems like you spend more time rebooting the aircraft than actually flying it), Bendy Jet, Emb180 (taxi to the runway, then 180 for taxi back to ramp), WiSCOD (Whistling Shitcan of Death) EMB ERJ: Brazillian Tube of Death, Jungle Jet, Brasilia Jet (Really p***es off the pilots...) Ercoupe: Scarecoupe, Air Scoop Fokker 27: The Dutch Dog Whistle, The Egg Beater, Whistle Pig, The Converter - (ie, it converted fuel into noise). Fokker 28: WhisperJet, She Who's Afraid of Snow Fokker 50: F**kin' Fifty, Little Fokker, Pinocchio Fokker 100: The Scud Because they point them at Europe and they don't come back!, Dutch Oven (lousy air conditioning), Runway Hog, The Mother Fokker (as it is the largest Fokker) FA 18: Bug, Rhino Fairey Gannet: Converter of Kerosene to Noise Fairey Swordfish: Stringbag F-4 Phantom: Grey Geese, Double Ugly, Rhino F-15A Eagle Steam Driven Eagle (for the old avionics compared to new C-models) F-15E Eagle Mud Hen (self-explanatory) F-86 Sabre Sword F-100 Hun F-102 Deuce F-104 Starfighter Flying coffin, Widowmaker, Manned missile, Zipper, The Pregnant Hatpin, Erdnagel (literally "earth nail"), from the military term for "tent peg" F-105 The Thud F-106 Cadillac (smooth flyer, lots of power, fast, huge cockpit) F-111: Aardvark, The Pig F-117: Cockroach (because they only came out at night). NightHawk Flutr Model 1: Daydream, the 4-Ring Fouga: Dog-whistle, Converter, Whistling Turtle HS121 Trident: Rodent, Ground Gripper HS125: Pocket rocket HS748: Paraffin Budgie, the Draggie, The Twenty Ton Dog Whistle. GAF Nomad: Go-mad, Gonad Gazelle: Chicken leg Gloster Javellin: Flying Trowel, Harmonious drag master, Flat Iron Gloster Meteor: Meatbox Gulfstream I: G-String, G-Once Gulfstream IV: Fourskin Handley Page Hampden: Flying Suitcase Hawker Hunter: Haunter HP Halifax: Halibag IAI Westwind: Lead Sled, Jew Canoe, Heebjet, Bagel Bomber, Yom Kippur Clipper Jaguar: Septic Cat Jet Provost: JP, The variable noise machine Joby: Blowme Katana DA20: Flying sperm KittyHawk: PityHawk Lake Amphibian: Doctor Killer LearJet: FearJet, Noisemaker Lilium: TheRanos Lockheed Constellation: Connie, Cancellation, “the best tri-motor ever” so good that sometimes the 4th engine works! Lockheed C-5 Galaxy: Cumulus Aluminus, FRED (F*cking Ridiculous Economic Disaster) Lockheed C130 Hercules: Fat Albert, Trash hauler, Herkybird, Cessna 130 Lockheed F117: BatMobile Lockheed Jetstar: Lawn Dart Lockheed 1011 TriStar: Bistar (Had so many RB211-22B failures), El-10-Elemon, FrightStar, Tritanic, Swamp Eater, Swamp Buggy, DeathStar Lockheed P38 Lightning: The Fork-Tailed Devil, Two planes one pilot Lockheed SR71: Blackbird, was also often called "Habu" because of its frequent deployment to Okinawa (where the habu is a nasty pit viper). Lockheed T-33: T Bird, Lockheed Racer (because it was anything but fast) Lockheed YF12: The Thing MD 11: Mad Dog, Mega Dog, Mechanical Disaster 11, More Death 11, MD-911, She Who Won't Land, She Who Won't Sell MD 80: Mad Dog 80, Stupid 80 (They call them Super 80's), Minimum Delay 80 (Minutes), Super Tube, Super Slug, Douglas Death Tube, Long Beach Sewer Pipe, Lead sled (because it was underpowered) MD 95: John Holmes condom MD Demon: Screamin Demon Mitsubishi Zero: type one lighter ( due to its ability to readily catch fire when attacked!) Mitsubishi MU-2: Widow Maker, Hiroshima Screamer, Rice Rocket, Kill You - 2, Ice Magnet Mohawk 298/Nord 262: Pteradactyl Northrop T38: White Rocket OH-58D Kiowa: Remote-Controlled Upside-Down Lawnmower, Kenny (the sight system looks like the South Park character) Partenavia: Part-of-Mafia, Partial Aviator, Part Banana PA-20 Pacer: The sled PA-22 Tri Pacer: Pie Chaser, Fly Paper, Milk stool PA-23 Aztec: Az-Truck, Azwreck, Flying Potato PA-28 Arrow: Sparrow PA-28 Cherokee: Cherry Tree, Chickopee PA-28 Warrior: Worrier PA-30 Twin Comanche: Twinkle PA-31 Navajo: Never-go, Have-a-go, The Ho PA-34 Seneca: Senekiller PA-38 Tomahawk: Traumahawk, Terrahawk, SpinMaster, Ratshit Hatchet PA-44 Seminole: Semenhole PA-60: ScareOstar, Death Star. PC12: Platypus. PBY 5 Catalina: Pigboat, Dumbo. Puma: Plastic pig, Percy. Republic Thunderchief: Thud RJ70/100: Real Jet Robinson R22: The Happy Hopping Easter Egg (they're cute and colorful...and look like toys.) SA 227 Metroliner: San-Antonio sewerpipe, Texas Sewer Pipe, Death pencil, The Screamin Weenie, Texas Lawn Dart, Swetro (It got very hot in the summer), Baltimore Whore (no visible means of support, skinny lil 'ol wings), Terror Tube, "That noisy ******* thing", Widow maker, Kerosene Crowbar, Fear tube, Necroliner, Buzzbomb, Metrowhiner, Death Tube, Turbo Dildo, San Antonio Sewer Rocket.... With Garrett Grenades, The Drainpipe SAAB: Slaab, Swedes Aren't Airplane Builders, S.O.B SAAB 35 Draken: Flying Trowel SAAB J29: Flying Barrel S3 Viking: Hoover Shorts Belfast: Belslug, Belslow (because it was so slow), in the early days they were called 'Dragmasters' because they were so slow and after Shorts fixed them with the strakes either side of the rear ramp they were called 'Fastbacks' Shorts Sandringham: The Triple Decker Bus Shorts Skyvan: The Whispering Nissan Hut Shorts 330: The Two Tailed Shed, Horse Float, Milk Carton, Winnebago, Box Car, Short Van, The Shed Shorts 360: Box, Shoe Box, Barn, Shed, Long Short, The box that the Skyvan came in, Winnabego with Wings, The Irish Concorde Sikorsky S61N: "Miss Piggy", (fat and ugly) Socata Rallye: "tin parachute" for its near vertical descent into short fields, "tin parasol"-- for their reluctance to stall (with leading edge slats)--they just descend almost vertically Sopwith Triplane: Tripehound Strikemaster: Constant speed - variable noise machine. Supermarine Scimitar: The Beast. Supermarine Stranraer: Whistling Shithouse Supermarine Walrus: Shagbat T-21 Sedburgh: The Barge TB-10 Tobago: Toboggan - because they only perform downhill! Tornado: Tonka TSR-2: Throw Some Rocks Two, Teararse Tu144: Concordski UH-60 Black Hawk: Lawn Dart, Crash Hawk VC-9 Vanguard: Vickers Vibrator VC-9 Vanguard Merchantman: The Guards Van, Whispering Warehouse, Shuddering Shithouse (because the crude crew toilet was in the entrance which was the forward service door on the original Vanguard. When the entrance door was open on the ground the whole world could see you having a pee!) VC-10: Iron Duck, Vickers Knickers, The flying chandelier Vickers Varsity: Flying pig Vickers Wellington: Wimpey Volocopter: DecapaCopter Vultee BT13: Vultee Vibrator (due to shaking in a spin) Westland Wessex: Walter Wessex or Wobbly Wessex 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
deicer Posted July 10, 2021 Author Share Posted July 10, 2021 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.O. Posted July 10, 2021 Share Posted July 10, 2021 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
deicer Posted July 11, 2021 Author Share Posted July 11, 2021 My second favourite aircraft after the Lanc! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A330PilotCanada Posted July 14, 2021 Share Posted July 14, 2021 Good Evening All: The following hyperlinks show some very well put together R/C models in Germany. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A330PilotCanada Posted July 14, 2021 Share Posted July 14, 2021 Good Afternoon All: Another fantastic video for the R/C enthusiasts 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest1 Posted July 14, 2021 Share Posted July 14, 2021 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest1 Posted July 15, 2021 Share Posted July 15, 2021 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
deicer Posted July 15, 2021 Author Share Posted July 15, 2021 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest1 Posted July 15, 2021 Share Posted July 15, 2021 How to watch thousands of beluga whales migrate through Canadian waters TORONTO -- If you ever wanted a front-row view of thousands of beluga whales, now’s your chance. Starting today, audiences around the world can check out “Beluga Whale Live Cam” to get an underwater glimpse of the annual migration of more than 57,000 beluga whales as they swim down from the Arctic to the warmer waters near northern Manitoba. “It’s telling us about their health and their numbers… the arctic ecosystem is an incredible place and so much is going on and so much is changing,” Stephen Petersen, director of conservation and research for Assiniboine Park Conservancy, told CTV’s Your Morning 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A330PilotCanada Posted July 15, 2021 Share Posted July 15, 2021 Good Morning All: The hyperlink below is of 98 1/2 year old RAF Flight Lieutenant Colin Bell DFC who completed 50 missions (Berlin 13 times) as a Pathfinder with RAF 608 Squadron. A short 75 years later he gets to fly in his Mosquito again as a gift I believe from his son! I only wish I can be that agile if I make his age. F/L Bell a most sincere thank you for your service! https://youtu.be/KDQIIVc-ZjQ 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
deicer Posted July 16, 2021 Author Share Posted July 16, 2021 Wanna go for a ride? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
deicer Posted July 16, 2021 Author Share Posted July 16, 2021 Here's the original 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.O. Posted July 16, 2021 Share Posted July 16, 2021 I knew it had to be sped up. Here's what happens when you play with the speed on a musical number. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A330PilotCanada Posted July 18, 2021 Share Posted July 18, 2021 Good Afternoon All: Some more YouTube videos of gas turbine R/C models for the R/C enthusiasts. The first one is of a Euro copter which is amazing when you think of all the things that make rotary wing aviation happen now demonstrated as a R/C model. If someone could correct me if I got this detail wrong a model gas turbine engine is in the neighbourhood of $5000.00 with a 100+ hour life. I like this joke about rotary wing aviation. What does rotary wing aviation have in common with the proverbial lady of the evening? No visible means of support! The last hyperlink is of a Sukhoi Su-275 which is as equally impressive for its detail. https://youtu.be/kdiWaHz1zTg https://youtu.be/GFi91Ze-3X0 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A330PilotCanada Posted July 20, 2021 Share Posted July 20, 2021 Good Afternoon All: The hyperlink below shows another turbine powered R/C aircraft. This time a MD-11 in Brazil's TAM livery and the degree of sophistication is eye dropping! https://youtu.be/Yx2oylQMr0A 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest1 Posted July 20, 2021 Share Posted July 20, 2021 And more for the $$$$$ Not a cheap hobby I would bet 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A330PilotCanada Posted July 20, 2021 Share Posted July 20, 2021 2 hours ago, Kargokings said: And more for the $$$$$ Not a cheap hobby I would bet Good Afternoon KK: Thank you for posting that incredible video! Regarding cost I have been told by a model R/C enthusiast a few years back that miniature gas turbines are in the 5K range and about 150 hour TBO. Yes very expensive hobby... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest1 Posted July 20, 2021 Share Posted July 20, 2021 3 hours ago, A330PilotCanada said: Good Afternoon KK: Thank you for posting that incredible video! Regarding cost I have been told by a model R/C enthusiast a few years back that miniature gas turbines are in the 5K range and about 150 hour TBO. Yes very expensive hobby... Back in the day, I had line controlled models that I had built but one was somewhat unique in that it had a diesel engine. The others ran on a fluid mixture that required a good battery to fire up the glowplug for the start. Many a time when spinning the prop my finger would not get of the way fast enough to avoid being clipped, after a day (if I did not crash) of flying, my world would continue to spin (line control after all requiring circling) coupled with the aroma of castor oil would continue to jog my memory when it came to supper time. Many I model I destroyed (crashed) and glued back to life but the one I enjoyed the most was a model of a P51. Worth every hour of the building and lots of flying enjoyment before I went too low, attempting to pickup a target, and embedded the aircraft and motor into a fence post on our farm. The next day, with the help of glue etc we were back flying .... Never could afford the radio controlled models but, as I got older, I did have rockets complete with chutes that I built and launched much to the enjoyment / help of the neighbor kids who would track the chutes and bring back the rockets to me.. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A330PilotCanada Posted July 21, 2021 Share Posted July 21, 2021 16 hours ago, Kargokings said: Back in the day, I had line controlled models that I had built but one was somewhat unique in that it had a diesel engine. The others ran on a fluid mixture that required a good battery to fire up the glowplug for the start. Many a time when spinning the prop my finger would not get of the way fast enough to avoid being clipped, after a day (if I did not crash) of flying, my world would continue to spin (line control after all requiring circling) coupled with the aroma of castor oil would continue to jog my memory when it came to supper time. Many I model I destroyed (crashed) and glued back to life but the one I enjoyed the most was a model of a P51. Worth every hour of the building and lots of flying enjoyment before I went too low, attempting to pickup a target, and embedded the aircraft and motor into a fence post on our farm. The next day, with the help of glue etc we were back flying .... Never could afford the radio controlled models but, as I got older, I did have rockets complete with chutes that I built and launched much to the enjoyment / help of the neighbor kids who would track the chutes and bring back the rockets to me.. Good Morning KK: Back in the day I did that myself I did the line controlled as well. A lot of fun but I got disoriented very quickly by going in circles. At Air Cadets we built multiple balsa wood models and some fabric covered wings. I can still remember the headaches from the dope used to cure the fabric from a long time ago. Spinning the prop I can still feel the "clips" on my fingers... Thanks 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
boestar Posted July 22, 2021 Share Posted July 22, 2021 I spent many hours building RC planes years ago. It all slowed to a stop after getting married and having kids. I loved building the models but many of them only ever flew once or twice. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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