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----- Original Message ----- From: "Harley Michaelis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <soaring@airage.com>
Sent: Friday, September 30, 2005 3:56 PM
Subject: Some history, status of things & a challenge


I suspect I have about as many years in model airplane design, engineering, construction, flying, crashing and repairing as anyone on the planet. I got hooked when Lindbergh did his 1927 flight to Paris. I thereafter never complained "Mom. . . there's nothing to do!"



With the big Depression shortly underway and money unavailable even for essentials, my building, originally with non-flying models, was done with cedar shingles, fence posts and cigar boxes, apple boxes and what was in the lumber yard scrap heap. The first adhesive I ever used was LePage's 48 Hour Iron Glue. It took that long to cure! Tools were my dad's hammer, file, pliers and mom's kitchen knives.



In my teens, besides "Spicy Detective" with its stimulating artwork, I discovered model mags offering things like Ambroid cement, balsa, tissue, banana oil, etc. There were rubber powered kits, but with money so scarce, I scratch built my own. Well, I did build one kit. It was a folding prop, 36" span, "Douglas Space Conqueror". To buy it at a whopping $3, I saved up small change for 6 mo.!



By the time I had discretionary income, I was so comfortable scratch building and with ideas popping into my head, I had no interest in kits. A life of scratch building has kept costs down, unleashed and kept the creative juices flowing and always given me something constructive to do, even now.



Since getting into R/C sailplanes about 1965 I've built one kit, a Dodgson Maestro I promptly sold. No discredit is meant to Bob's designs. I remember a contest with 28 entrants I attended. 27 had a Dodgson ship. It's not his fault, but as money became less tight and with younger guys who never scratch built anything wanting to get in the game, kits became the way to go.



Now with more money to spend and with guys showing up who are accustomed to "instant satisfaction", and with the advent of ARF's and RTF's, relatively inexpensive kits that can similarly perform are about non-existent.



The upshot of this is that the joy and satisfaction of being creative has been squelched, it costs too much, and because of costs it limits new participation. Pity.



Sadly, guys who take this route do no original thinking, do nothing new or creative and thus have nothing to pass on to make a meaningful contribution. This is clearly confirmed in the pages of the model magazines that used to contain such meaty and useful construction articles that reflected the state of the art creations done by individual modelers.



I'm disheartened that so many guys have acquiesced to the notion that only ARF airframes can effectively compete. This notion, in my humble opinion, is erroneous and essentially the result of failing to develop and use building skills.



Just my opinion, but I think the common excuses of "no time", "my time is too valuable", "I can't build", "I want to be competitive", etc. have little validity for most who express them. Rather, for most, I consider it just a copout for their failure to develop and use skills and exercise their creative abilities.



By now, readers must know of the Big Genie, the Genie Pro and the Genie LT/S at http://genie.rchomepage.com/. These are unique, highly competitive, scratch-buildable designs that, properly built and in skilled hands, will perform as well as any ARF in their size classes. The "how to" CD offered probably provides the most thorough instructions with pictures of any model offered on the planet. Stick to the script, finish one and you'll have learned skills to use for life as well as having something to show up with you can be proud about.



What is needed to break out of the ARF shackles and set

examples is for a bunch of you experts to accept the challenge to build one of the 3 ships over the winter. At near 85, I'm a "threatened species", but still able and willing to help with e-mail support. By next year, if still functioning, I may have lost interest in being so helpful.



I'd love to see a couple of dozen guys get to it pronto. I sure don't want to find myself with nothing to do this winter after I finish a new LT/S with the composite fuse and big Genie #29.












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