The event will
held at the beautiful Control Line site in Whiteman Park, Perth,
Western Australia, on 7-13 May, 2016.
The World Championships event will be preceded by a World Cup event
on 4-6 May and followed by the West Australia Champs on 15-17
May. More information on this
website.
Labels
- F2A (Speed Model Aircraft)
- F2B (Aerobatic Model Aircraft)
- F2C (Team Racing Model Aircraft)
- F2D (Combat Model Aircraft)
- Magazines
Showing posts with label F2C (Team Racing Model Aircraft). Show all posts
Showing posts with label F2C (Team Racing Model Aircraft). Show all posts
8/25/12
2012 FAI World Championships for Control Line Model Aircraft Bulgaria, Pazardzhik
2012 FAI World Championships for Control Line Model Aircraft Bulgaria, Pazardzhik, 26.08.2012 - 01.09.2012
9/18/11
Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.6 (June 1961)
Title:Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.6 (June 1961)
Language:English
Format: PDF
Size:12.6 MB
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9/16/11
Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.1 (January 1961)
Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.1
Model Aeronautical Press Ltd | January 1961 | English | 59 pages | PDF | 10.5 MB
'Aero Modeller' (or Aeromodeller) was for decades the premier magazine for flying model aircraft. The first issue was dated November 1935. At its peak during the 1950s and 1960s it progessively absorbed a number of rivals, being called 'Aero Modeller now incorporating Model Aircraft' by February 1966, and 'Aero Modeller incorporating the Model Aeroplane Constructor and Model Aircraft' by 1968.
Alongside the many features related to aeromodelling, each issue typically included one or two features on full-size aircraft. These usually centred around the famous series of scale plans for which the magazine was justly famous. Multi-part series such as 'Famous Biplanes' and 'Aircraft Described' ran across the centre pages and featured b+w photographs, detail sketches and a brief description alongside the multi-view scale drawings. In the early 1960s it also included a regular Q & A feature run by Air-Britain called 'Sign Post' which mostly concerned aircraft markings. This was later replaced by a series concentrating on aeromodelling. Some issues also included aircraft colour profiles on the inside back cover. During the 1960s the magazine averaged 38-44 pages per issue, with many b+w photos and line drawings and sketches.
Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.1 (January 1961): Sopwith Triplane scale plans.
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Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.3 (March 1961)
Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.3
Model Aeronautical Press Ltd | March 1961 | English | 59 pages | PDF | 11.1 MB
Aero Modeller (or Aeromodeller) was for decades the premier magazine for flying model aircraft. The first issue was dated November 1935. At its peak during the 1950s and 1960s it progessively absorbed a number of rivals, being called 'Aero Modeller now incorporating Model Aircraft' by February 1966, and Aero Modeller incorporating the Model Aeroplane Constructor and Model Aircraft by 1968.
Alongside the many features related to aeromodelling, each issue typically included one or two features on full-size aircraft. These usually centred around the famous series of scale plans for which the magazine was justly famous. Multi-part series such as 'Famous Biplanes' and 'Aircraft Described' ran across the centre pages and featured b+w photographs, detail sketches and a brief description alongside the multi-view scale drawings. In the early 1960s it also included a regular Q & A feature run by Air-Britain called 'Sign Post' which mostly concerned aircraft markings. This was later replaced by a series concentrating on aeromodelling. Some issues also included aircraft colour profiles on the inside back cover.
Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.3 (March 1961): Famous Biplane - D.H. Tiger Moth.
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Model Aeronautical Press Ltd | March 1961 | English | 59 pages | PDF | 11.1 MB
Aero Modeller (or Aeromodeller) was for decades the premier magazine for flying model aircraft. The first issue was dated November 1935. At its peak during the 1950s and 1960s it progessively absorbed a number of rivals, being called 'Aero Modeller now incorporating Model Aircraft' by February 1966, and Aero Modeller incorporating the Model Aeroplane Constructor and Model Aircraft by 1968.
Alongside the many features related to aeromodelling, each issue typically included one or two features on full-size aircraft. These usually centred around the famous series of scale plans for which the magazine was justly famous. Multi-part series such as 'Famous Biplanes' and 'Aircraft Described' ran across the centre pages and featured b+w photographs, detail sketches and a brief description alongside the multi-view scale drawings. In the early 1960s it also included a regular Q & A feature run by Air-Britain called 'Sign Post' which mostly concerned aircraft markings. This was later replaced by a series concentrating on aeromodelling. Some issues also included aircraft colour profiles on the inside back cover.
Aeromodeller Vol.27 No.3 (March 1961): Famous Biplane - D.H. Tiger Moth.
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Filesonic
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8/21/11
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