At 09:11 PM 1/19/02 +0900, Paul & Rickie Clark wrote:
>"Parts were die smashed, balsa was punky, decalage a mystery with each
>kit. It was patterned after the Son Of Savage, a great slope plane of the
>past,
You sure you're thinking of the SOS? My recollection was that the two
looked nothin
At 07:58 AM 1/19/02 -0600, rcsoar4fun wrote:
>I think Ripmax out of England are now remaking the Ridge Runt. Expensive
>little bugger.
>http://www2.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin/wti0001p?Q=1&I=LA1372&P=1
A while ago, there was what appeared to be a hollow molded RR copy called
the "HillBilly." I ca
No, not too bad, especially if they do a decent job on the wings (and
consider that an unbuilt foamie flying wing cost $50-60). I've seen this
thing before in the Tower Hobbies catalog and didn't realize it was
built-up...I wonder if its a copy of the normal RR or the Super?
At 09:05 AM 1/19/02
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2002 8:05 AM
Subject: Re: [RCSE] RIDGE RUNT (cont) & MORE
> In a message dated 1/19/2002 8:55:17 AM Eastern Standard Time,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> << I think Ripmax out of Engla
In a message dated 1/19/2002 8:55:17 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
<< I think Ripmax out of England are now remaking the Ridge Runt. Expensive
little bugger. >>
Dude
$60 built and covered doesn't seem to extravegant to me.
Denny Maize
Polecat Aeroworks
(717) 789-014
Ah yes, the Ridge Runt. The name was correct, thats for sure. I remember
some of the balsa was hard enought to be used for house framing, the rest
soft enough to eat. Parts fit was so good I thought they cut the parts out
with a hatchet. It did go together fast though. My father and I once we
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