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Series
800 - Super Detailed Scale Models
Price: $39.99
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Display
and Flying Models
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SOPWITH
CAMEL
GUI 801
This
temperamental British World War 1 fighter was flown by such
distinguished pilots as Lt. Col R. Collishaw, Major D. R.
MacLaren and the most famous of all, Capt. Roy Brown. Capt.
Roy Brown engaged in the dogfight that resulted in the death
of Germany's ace of aces, Manfred Von Richthofen popularly
known as the "Red Baron". The Camel had great
agility in combat due to the fantastic torque of its rotary
engine and the fact that engine, pilot and guns were all
located on the first seven feet of the wooden airframe.
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CESSNA
SKYHAWK
GUI802
Claimed
by its maker the Cessna Aircraft Co. of Wichita, Kansas
to be the best selling single engine airplane in the world,
the Skyhawk can take four adults and their baggage at 134
M.P.H. for 450 non-stop miles and still have 45 minutes
of reserve fuel. Over 17,000 of these aircraft are in service
around the world. Model 172 specifications: wing span, 35-10;
wing area, 175.5 square feet; length, 26-11;
height, 8-9 ½; service ceiling 13,100
feet; power, 4 cylinder engine 150 rated H.P. at 2700 R.P.M.;
speed, at sea level, 139 M.P.H.
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STEARMAN
PT-17
GUI803
The
majority of U.S. pilots of World War 2 received their primary
flight training in the famous Stearman Trainer. This excellent
2-place biplane was known as the PT-17 when delivered to
Army flight training centers. The Navy designations were
N2S-1 and N2S-4. Nearly 3,000 were built in the 1940-43
period and, in the post war era and up to modern times,
the Stearman Trainer has been successfully used as a stunt
plane and crop duster.
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DOUGLAS
DC-3
GUI804
Considered
to be the single most important aircraft in the history
of air transportation, the DC-3 first flew in 1935. Douglas
Aircraft built it as a replacement for the smaller DC-2.
Its 180 MPH cruising speed made it the fastest of its day,
and carried 11 more passengers than the Boeing 247. By 1938,
80 percent of all American commercial airline traffic was
carried on DC-3s. During World War 2, the military
conversion of the DC-3, the C-47 was used by the thousands
in every theatre of the war. After the war, many of the
surplus C-47s were converted back to civilian service.
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N.A.
B-25 MITCHELL
GUI805
The
B-25 Mitchell was one of the most outstanding medium bombers
of World War 2. Conceived in mid-1939, the first production
model flew in August 1940 and the first operational success
was scored on December 24, 1941 with the destruction of
the Japanese submarine. In April 1942, 16 B-25s made
a historic raid on Tokyo operating from the aircraft carrier
USS Hornet under the command of General Doolittle- a raid
that did little damage, but gave the U.S. a psychological
lift during the early days of the Pacific Ocean hostilities.
During the war years, the RAF, the Soviet Union, China Union,
Brazil and the Netherlands also used the B-25. The H
version with 16 guns and a 75mm cannon was the most lethal
twin-engine bomber of World War 2.
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SPIRIT
OF ST. LOUIS
GUI807
The
Spirit of St. Louis, piloted by Charles A. Lindbergh, made
the first non-stop flight between New York and Paris on
May 20-21, 1927. Time airborne-33 hours and 30 minutes.
Lindbergh took off from Roosevelt Field, Long Island, NY
on May 20th with but little sleep the previous night. His
aircraft, 1,000 pounds overweight, barely lifted off at
the end of the runway missing a telephone pole by a mere
20 feet. Fighting exhaustion most of the time, Lindbergh
struggled to keep from falling asleep and at intervals,
stuck his head out the window of his plane to refresh himself
in the wind-stream. At the end of 28 hours, he sighted the
cost of Ireland and for the first time realized that he
was on target for his goal, the airfield of Paris, France.
While still miles away he sighted the glowing night-lights
of Paris. Shortly after, he landed at Le Bourget Airfield
to the acclaim of thousands awaiting him on the runway.
At that moment, Lindbergh and the Spirit of St. Louis entered
aviations hall of fame.
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