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full size printed plan peter o'dactyl free-flight reptile .010 or towline glider
full size printed plan peter o'dactyl free-flight reptile .010 or towline glider
full size printed plan peter o'dactyl free-flight reptile .010 or towline glider
full size printed plan peter o'dactyl free-flight reptile .010 or towline glider

Full Size Printed Plan Peter O'Dactyl free-flight reptile .010 or towline glider

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Description

Full Size Printed Plan & Building Notes

No material plans only

Peter O'Dactyl

A free-flight reptile? It can also fly without power as a towline glider? Well, it should wake up the scale model judges.

Full Size printed plan on a 62”x 32” Sheet

Two-page article with building notes

Wingspan 60”

Engine .010 

Roy Clough Jr

   This free flying dragon Is right out of the Jurassic period. As a towline glider, or powered with a tiny glow en­gine, it wheels across the sky with all the awesome grandeur of its remote reptilian ancestors.

  Once the most numerous flying species on earth, the pterodactyl Is (ter-o-dak-til) came in a dozen varieties. They ranged in size from tiny winged lizards one foot long to majestic soaring monsters whose wing span' approached 30 feet.

With a wing structure bearing a superficial resemblance to modem bats these flying reptiles were probably the smartest members of the dinosaur family which included the 80-ton Brontosaurus, the terrible Tyrannosaurus Rex and that fighting tank of the dawn age, Tricera­tops. Fossilised skulls indicate the pter­odactyl brain was far advanced over- the walnut-sized think-tanks of the ground bound behemoths.

    Our model is something of a compro­mise between strict biological accuracy and engineering considerations necessary to secure good £lying characteristics. Instead of extensively changing the shape of one beast, we combined the best fea­tures of several to obtain a configuration which would fly well and put up a con­vincing appearance in the air. Thus, "Peter O'Dactyl" is a hybrid creature with the basic skeletal arrangement of pteranodon, but the diamond shaped tail of the smaller Rhamphorhynchus. Teeth found in some pterodactyls are absent in others. We used 'em to produce an en­gaging toothy grin. The crest which we needed as an engine attachment has ample precedent. Two wing ribs (which the original beastie did not have) were larded on to prevent the trailing edge of the wing from bellying upward and changing the angle of incidence in flight.  

Thank you for looking

 

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