Hobby Helpers # 581
Wing span 34", Pee Wee .020 Free flight plane. The magazine article is included.
The file will print a plan 24" x 30".
File $5.00
Radio Control Waco
By my role model, Ken Willard. Oh my god! As I type out this listing, I noticed not only do I look like Ken in the picture below. I even have similar glasses on, sport a similar hair cut and I am wearing a similar flannel shirt. I could pass for Kens little brother! LOL Birds of a feather? hehe
Thank goodness it is a man I admire and not Martha Stewart! LOL
File $5.00



Cessna 180
This is a Hobby Helpers RC plan from 1963 of a Cessna 180.
41" wing span. 28" length. Power .049 shown. Radio control plans. Magazine article is included.
Plan is as pure and clean as the good witch of the North.
The file will print a plan 36" x 50".
File $5.00
MACCHI C-200 and C-202
This is a high resolution TIFF file containing 200 x 200 dots per inch.
Wing span 26",,, length 29'',,, Power: Fox .29 called for. The really great magazine article, which is dated September, 1954, is printed on the plans. Also, the plans have a printed article about them and a BOM. This is a control line plane.
HISTORY: Developed in the mid-1930s for the Italian Royal Air Force (Regia Aeronautica), the "Saetta" was one of the principal fighters with which Italy entered the Second World War. The prototype made its first flight in December 1937, and by Italy's entry into World War II in June 1940 some 156 were in service. The MC-200 was first employed against the British at Malta and eventually saw service in Greece, North Africa, Yugoslavia, and the Soviet Union. Saettas were employed against U.S. forces in North Africa and over Italy itself. A total of 1,151 were produced.
When purchasing a plan from me, I strongly suggest that you create a new folder on your desk top, properly named (example: X Plane) and "save" the email attachments to that folder.
File $5.00
Note to Willie, finish them. HH #663
Macchi-Castoldi MC.72
Hobby Helpers # 585
Wing span 32", Length O.A. 29", chord 6", control line plane. Plans show how to build a dolly for land take offs.
The Magazine article is included.
History: Built for speed and competition in the Schnieder Trophy races, this scarlet racer did not actually race for the trophy but did set a world record of 440 MPH in 1934. This record for propeller driven seaplanes remains the standard today. In the collection of the Museo Storico Dell'Aeronautica Militare, Aeroporto Vinga di Valle, Italia
The file will print a plan 36" x 66".
File $5.00
|